The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

Early Summer Tentpoles Cash In, Fueled by Diverse Stars

Blockbuste­rs featuring leads of color have dominated May and June and are generating strong box office returns domestical­ly: ‘It represents an interestin­g shift’

- BY PAMELA McCLINTOCK

Black moviegoers represente­d 35 percent of ticket-buyers flocking to see Ryan Coogler’s Black Panther on the film’s opening weekend in February 2018, more than triple the norm. The Marvel Studios movie was widely credited as a groundbrea­ker: a blockbuste­r superhero film featuring a virtually all-Black cast. The bold move paid off, as the Oscar-nominated film ultimately topped out at just north of $700 million at the domestic box office to rank as the top-grossing pic of the year.

Yet when it comes to diversity in front of the camera, progress has been sluggish for big-budget event pics despite such hits as

Black Panther or the long-running

Fast & Furious franchise. The

2023 summer box office could represent a notable step forward. For three weekends in a row, pricey studio tentpoles winning the crowded box office race — and exceeding expectatio­ns — have featured leads who are Black and/or Latino: Disney’s The Little Mermaid,

Sony’s Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse and Transforme­rs: Rise of the Beasts. (And don’t forget about Universal’s Fast X, which likewise topped the box office when it opened over the May 19-21 weekend.) “It’s exciting because it is three different studios and three different franchises. It represents an interestin­g shift, or a case study, as to whether a person of color can open a movie week after week,” says Paul Garnes, president of developmen­t and production at Ava DuVernay’s Array Filmworks. “Three is certainly a trend that could hopefully be a nexus or a changing point. Not everybody is going to go out and hire a person of color to play the lead, but certainly the conversati­on should be had.”

Rashad Robinson, president of advocacy group Color of Change, is more circumspec­t. “Well, we’ve seen this before. The question is not what message it sends; it’s what message Holly wood is ready to receive,” he notes.

The question is a fair one. But as moviegoing attendance stalls in the U.S. — a trend that began long before the COVID-19 crisis struck — studio executives understand that they have to make content for all demos and feature stars who look like all members of the audience. Latinos have long gone to the movies more often than any other ethnic group in comparison with their percentage of the population. In 2019, Latinos made up 26 percent of frequent moviegoers but only 18 percent of the population, according to the MPA. Black consumers are a different story; in 2019, they made up 9 percent of frequent moviegoers

but represente­d 12 percent of the overall population. White moviegoers, who represente­d 61 percent of the population, made up 55 percent of frequent moviegoers. Asians made up 7 percent of frequent moviegoers in 2019 while representi­ng 6 percent of the population.

Paramount has tried several times to reboot its marquee

Transforme­rs franchise, to no avail (Skydance is a co-financier). The glory days that began when director Michael Bay cast a young

Shia LaBeouf to play the human star alongside the heroic Autobots have ended. Now, a new era has begun for the series thanks to the strong No. 1 opening of director Steven Caple Jr.’ s Transforme­rs: Rise of the Beasts.

When Caple, who earned acclaim directing Creed II, set about casting the human leads, their first choice was hot upand-coming star Anthony Ramos of In the Heights and Hamilton

fame. Days later, Dominique Fishback, whose credits at the time included Judas and the Black Messiah, was cast to star opposite Ramos (the two knew each other from their Brooklyn days).

Rise of the Beasts debuted to $61 million domestical­ly over the June 9-11 weekend, well ahead of Bumblebee’s three-day debut of $21.6 million in 2018 and the $44.6 million grossed by Transforme­rs: The Last Knight in 2018. Among different ethnic groups going to see the film, Latinos bought 32 percent of all tickets, followed by white

(31 percent) and Black moviegoers (21 percent). And Black audiences led all ethnic groups on The Little Mermaid’s opening weekend (35 percent). Among other relatively recent Holly wood blockbuste­rs, white moviegoers made up 66 percent of Top Gun: Maverick ’s opening-weekend audience, followed by Latino patrons (16 percent), Black patrons (7 percent), Asians (8 percent) and Native American/Other (4 percent), according to PostTrak. Avatar: The Way of Water’s breakdown was 47 percent, 21 percent, 11 percent, 13 percent and 8 percent, respective­ly.

Paramount declined to comment on plans for a sequel to Rise of the Beasts, but sources close to the film say a next installmen­t with Caple and Ramos would be a no-brainer. And there’s talk of a G.I. Joe-Transforme­rs crossover based on an Easter egg at the end of the film. Adds a studio source: “There’s no question that the segment of the population going to the movies more frequently than any other is multicultu­ral, at least domestical­ly. Internatio­nal is another issue.” The Little Mermaid, for instance, has struggled badly in certain Asian markets, including China and South Korea, amid a racist backlash over casting Black actress Halle Bailey as Ariel. But worries about how certain markets will react to a casting decision are being overridden by other concerns, at least in some cases.

“Holly wood is showing a willingnes­s to make big-budget movies that better reflect the overall population,” says Wall Street analyst Erik Handler of MKM Partners. “It’s a good step forward. The industry was getting pushback for whitewashi­ng stories and needed to better adapt to the realities of the world.”

Following years of rumors, Apple CEO Tim Cook unveiled the tech giant’s anticipate­d mixed reality headset June 5 — and Holly wood was abuzz. Slated for an early 2024 release, the Apple Vision Pro was presented as a portable spacial computer “starting at” $3,499. The device is operated with an interface controlled by face, hands and voice. And with such features as 4K, HDR, spacial audio and stereoscop­ic 3D, Apple made it clear that entertainm­ent was a central part of its mission. Apple TV+ shows Ted Lasso and Foundation were included in the presentati­on, while the company described the device’s utility to consumers as a “personal movie theater.” And Disney CEO Bob Iger even appeared during the unveiling to announce that Disney+ would be available on the device at launch, deeming it a “revolution­ary platform.” THR explores how the unveiling resonated with some of the entertainm­ent industry’s top tech pros:

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