The conversation about Shazam! Fury of the Gods opening weekend box office has only proved one thing for certain:
We’re still not talking about box office responsibly.
In fact, not only haven’t we learned our lesson about how Hollywood and movie releases have changed in the past few years, but it seems like a lot of us simply refuse to accept it at all.
Why, though? Why can’t we see how the industry is changing and accept that going to the movies in 2023 is very different than it was in 2019 or before? Why do so many of us reach for a pile of lazy excuses about how superhero fatigue and bad marketing and from Warner Bros. Discovery sank another Shazam film at the box office?
It’s because we want to win Twitter arguments and feel like we know what we’re talking about, even if it’s pretty clear we don’t.
You might be thinking, “Come on Ray, it’s obvious what’s happening here. Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and Shazam! Fury of the Gods box office numbers both prove that the general audience is tired of superhero films. The genre is finally going downhill.”
Really? Then why did Marvel Studios and DC Films combine for $3.7 billion earned worldwide at the box office last year? What happened in between Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’s $858.7 million earned just last November and the past month that burned the general audience out so badly on superhero movies? Did Santa ironically tell them all that superheroes weren’t real and they’re bummed out about it?
Or is it that with so much superhero content out there, in the form of movies and shows from both Marvel and DC, that the general audience is simply being more picky about what they actually spend money on a ticket for? After all, the three MCU movies released in 2022 were all headlined by Avengers(Doctor Strange, Thor) or in the case of Wakanda Forever, were an emotional tribute to a fallen Avenger actor in Chadwick Boseman.
Black Adam might not have made much for DC, but The Batman did($770.9 million), and it likely would have made more if WB had kept it exclusively in theaters past 45 days.
But wait, where did it go after 45 days? What changed things for it then?
Oh right, HBO Max. The WBD streaming service that boasts 96.1 million users(which includes linear HBO) and earned $2.451 billion in direct-to-consumer revenue in 2022, despite WBD’s rough fourth quarter losses, along with the rest of Hollywood.
“But surely you don’t think people in the general audience that already have HBO Max were waiting until Black Adam reached the streaming service before they watched it, do you? Come on Ray, who’s actually doing that?”
At least three of my co-workers told me that's exactly what they did last year.
Then my boss, who isn’t general audience at all and is a fan of comic book movies, took it a step further to tell me he waited for Wakanda Forever to hit Disney+ before he watched it, not because he didn’t want to see it when it released in theaters, but because timing and budget gave him the patience to see it later when he didn’t have to worry about ticket prices, concessions, gas money and everything else he might need to see it in theaters.
I know plenty of Marvel fans have gotten used to the idea that the MCU’s milkshake brings all the boys to the yard no matter what, but inflation and general economics have made it a more difficult choice for audiences to flock to the theater as much as they used to.
So maybe, just maybe, they largely decided that instead of seeing Quantumania or Fury of the Gods in theaters right at the start of 2023, they’ll wait for Disney+ and HBO Max for those, and then see Guardians of the Galaxy Volume 3 and The Flash in theaters, since those both are larger movies with bigger names and more audience appeal for multiple reasons. They look more like event films than Ant-Man and Shazam do, perhaps.
Now, why doesn’t that make more sense than superhero fatigue or bad marketing?
Well, the thing is it DOES make more sense and is far more logical of an explanation, but that’s not going to win you any Twitter arguments with Jenny8675309 who desperately needs to tell her 4 followers that your favorite comic book movie franchise is trash and should be rebooted as soon as possible. You need an easy button to shut up her argument, don’t you? Something that a lot of other people are grasping onto and using as a catch-all argument to explain the numbers.
That’s why you’re blaming the studio and the superhero genre, because it’s the easiest button to push to sound like you know what you’re talking about.
But of course, you’re ignoring too much context, like how The Streaming Age combined with inflation has forever changed how audiences decide what they see at the theater or not, and how those same streaming apps are part of the bottom line for these studios when it comes to making more movies for characters like Ant-Man and Shazam in the future.
So perhaps instead of tossing the dirt on their graves so quickly, you might want to wait to see how they do with home, digital, and streaming release first.
To be fair, it’s not just fans on social media that are doing this, it’s also executives and people like David Zaslav, CEO of WBD, who continue to downplay streaming and act like theatrical release is still the dominant force for content among the audience itself.
Funny enough, all you have to do to know how untrue that is, is read the part of the recent Ben Affleck interview in the Hollywood Reporter that Discussing Film and other regurgitators didn’t repost for you as a clickbait, out of context headline. Look at what he says he learned from his daughter’s attitude toward content today: