Wonder Woman’s powers
LOS ANGELES/NEW YORK Wonder Woman proved she can sell movie tickets last weekend, with more than US$100 million in sales at the box office.
The next question is whether she can also sell toys — and makeup, and ready-bake cookies, and a full gamut of tie-ins that challenge the traditional “boys only” marketing of superheroes.
Wonder Woman, starring Gal Gadot, is the latest and biggest test of Hollywood’s ability to promote a female superhero. After Star Wars: The Force Awakens, fans used the #wheresRey campaign to highlight the initial absence of toys and games featuring the movie’s female star — before Disney flooded stores with more merchandise.
More recently, characters like Harley Quinn, Batgirl, Black Window and Supergirl have been included in ensemble packs on store shelves. Wonder Woman is the first female superhero in years to carry her own film.
“Until the last three years, female superheroes were few and far between,” said Jim Silver, editor of toy review site TTPM.com. “You never saw them, and the ones that were tested, except for one or two like the Power Puff girls, never did well. Now, the whole market has changed.”
He estimates toy sales this year for Wonder Woman, strictly tied to the movie, will be about US$100 million — less than many of the traditional male superhero tieins but still a significant amount of revenue.
Then there are the girl-oriented tie-ins, like Wonder Woman-branded cosmetics, jewelry and purses. The Amazonian princess could earn up to US$1 billion from global sales of licensed merchandise, said Karina Masolova, executive editor of The Licensing Letter, which tracks licensing revenue. That would put her ahead of Superman and on par with Batman who gets an advantage from his assortment of weapons and vehicles.
“Superheroes have become accepted as part of pop culture, and it’s not only a niche consumer base buying products,” she said, recalling a time when superhero toys had a nerdier connotation. “But now the toys can be in the girls’ aisle too. And in the makeup aisle. And the grocery aisle.”
“There are definitely more girls looking to buy superhero toys and have them as role models,” Silver said.