I think you and are similar. The movie is not covering costs so it is not a success. But compared to so real flops, this one does not seem to be at that level as well.You dint get it. I’m not saying it’s the thing that makes it a success. You seem to think that I am.
As I said before, I wasn't necessarily disagreeing with your conclusion. It was the process to get there that I was faulting.At the end of the day if you feel like Ender's Game is a better comparison because of different factors it really doesn't matter, that film also never got a sequel due to poor box office performance.
The combination of this movie either loosing money or maybe eventually limping to breaking even after everything is counted, along Hasbro selling it's film production company really speaks to the chances of a sequel being made. And I hate to say it those chances aren't good. I would love to be wrong. I loved Honor Among Thieves and would love to see a sequel. But I'm just being realistic about it's chances of getting a sequel.
I think folks might be thinking flop means bomb. To me a flop is a film that just doesn't resonate with the general movie going audience. Why is a very nuanced and different discussion. A bomb is something that nobody wants to see, critics despise, and just looses its ass at the box office. Things like Pluto Nash, Lone Ranger, etc..To me this thread still suffers a fundamental split in expectations on what constitutes a hit or a flop.
Ultimately: A hit or flop is defined at the box office. You never see articles talking about how well a movie is doing based on toy sales, or brand inspiration, or secondary media sales. Its just not the conversation.
Now, that doesn't mean a movie can't be seen internally at a company as "having been worth doing", for various reasons. It also doesn't mean that another movie couldn't be made even if the first one was a "flop" by box office standards, again due to various reasons.
So if we are back into the original question of the thread: Is the Dnd movie a hit or a flop? We go to the box office, and right now the box office vs its budget, its clearly not doing well, and is probably a "flop" based on box office standards. And that's really it I'm afraid, we can talk around and around until the cows come home, or can wait to see the trickle from the remaining weeks to see if anything miraculous happens....but otherwise this conversation has been settled at this point.
Every single D&D book is tied to the movie. That's the brand choice they made and it's fueling strong search, strong sales, strong licensing and strong merch.
There's mediocre box office, for a multitude of reasons.
So if we are back into the original question of the thread: Is the Dnd movie a hit or a flop? We go to the box office, and right now the box office vs its budget, its clearly not doing well, and is probably a "flop" based on box office standards. And that's really it I'm afraid, we can talk around and around until the cows come home, or can wait to see the trickle from the remaining weeks to see if anything miraculous happens....but otherwise this conversation has been settled at this point.
It's a flop because not enough people are going to see it, but the people that ARE seems to like it so, as Payn say, it's not a bomb.I think folks might be thinking flop means bomb. To me a flop is a film that just doesn't resonate with the general movie going audience. Why is a very nuanced and different discussion. A bomb is something that nobody wants to see, critics despise, and just looses its ass at the box office. Things like Pluto Nash, Lone Ranger, etc..
Seems DADHAT is a flop, but of course, here folks are going to be very sensitive to that. They love the game and want its popularity to soar. Being branded a flop is not going to do that. However, I think it not being a dumpster fire like previous film attempts is a big win in itself. Also, flops sometimes have a tendency to get sequels anyways and another attempt built on this foundation could be even better.![]()
Seems DADHAT is a flop, but of course, here folks are going to be very sensitive to that. They love the game and want its popularity to soar. Being branded a flop is not going to do that. However, I think it not being a dumpster fire like previous film attempts is a big win in itself. Also, flops sometimes have a tendency to get sequels anyways and another attempt built on this foundation could be even better.![]()