ReportWire

Tag: box office flops

  • War 2 to Maa: FLOP films of 2025 that garnered massive…

    Flop movies that performed well on OTT

    2026 is only a few days away. This year marked an important time for the entertainment sector. Numerous high-budget movies failed, whereas several low-budget films made a huge impact at the box office. Today, we will discuss the movies that underperformed at the box office yet gained significant affection from viewers due to their remarkable success on OTT platforms.

    Coolie

    Rajinikanth’s Tamil film was launched in August. The movie created significant excitement and anticipation. Nevertheless, when it was launched, its profits did not come to fruition. Reports suggest that the movie was produced with a budget of ₹350 crore and earned Rs 285.1 crore at the Indian box office. The movie is available for viewing on Prime Video. The movie garnered considerable views on streaming services.

    War 2

    The list also features Hrithik Roshan’s spy action movie. This film garnered significant buzz as well. This film featuring Hrithik Roshan was launched on August 14th and competed with Coolie. Although the movie underperformed in theaters, it garnered significant viewership on the streaming service Netflix.

    Maalik

    Rajkummar Rao’s crime thriller also performed badly at the box office. As per a report from Koimoi, the movie was produced with a budget of Rs 54 crore (540 million rupees). Nonetheless, its box office revenues reached only Rs 263.6 million (263.6 million rupees). The movie was later launched on Prime Video, where it garnered substantial viewership.

    Maa

    This paranormal movie featuring Kajol premiered on June 27th. Netflix reported that the movie earned Rs 36.8 crore. Nonetheless, following its launch on Netflix, it turned into a success and garnered positive responses from viewers.

    The Bengal Files

    This movie, which is part of Vivek Agnihotri’s Files trilogy, hit theaters this year. The narrative is grounded in real occurrences. Regardless of significant debate over its launch, it nonetheless premiered in cinemas. Nevertheless, it did not succeed in terms of box office performance. It launched on the Zee5 OTT platform and received positive feedback.

    Azaad

    Following that is Rasha Thadani’s debut film, Azad, daughter of Raveena Tandon. This film also created considerable excitement. Ajay Devgn was featured in the movie as well. Following its debut in theaters on January 17th, the film premiered on Netflix on March 14th, garnering a significant audience.

    Emergency

    Kangana Ranaut’s movie, Emergency, encountered a comparable outcome. Drawing from the 1975 Emergency, the movie garnered a varied reception at theaters when it premiered, yet it became an exceptional triumph on OTT platforms.

    Source link

  • Oscars 2023: Yes, Some Awards Movies Flopped, but Art Matters

    Oscars 2023: Yes, Some Awards Movies Flopped, but Art Matters

    First there was Tár, then The Fabelmans, then She Said. Empire of Light followed soon after. They were all big fall festival movies, aimed squarely at awards attention—and they all failed to ignite at the box office. Some did well in large cities for a couple of weeks, then faltered in wider release. Others never got off the ground at all, hobbled by weak marketing campaigns and a hard-to-diagnose lack of interest. For years, it has been a locus of worry within the industry: this growing chasm between box office triumphs and the movies deemed, by some anyway, to be the best of the year.

    This year will see hits like Everything Everywhere All at Once, Top Gun: Maverick, and Avatar: The Way of Water jockeying for awards. But long gone are the days when nearly every film nominated for best picture at the Oscars had a solid financial résumé. In 2022, the situation began to look truly existentially dire. Entertainment outside the home has, apparently, become an unjustified hassle for all but the loudest, biggest spectaculars, like Marvel movies and nefariously ticketed Taylor Swift concerts.

    The box office failure of so many niche films suggests a disheartening sea change in culture, one greeted breathlessly—perhaps even gleefully—by some in the industry’s commentariat class. Maybe, as those pundits suggest, we should stop wringing our hands about this shift and face the couch-bound future with a kind of tech optimism. The thinking seems to be that these artier movies will still be made, they’ll just be relegated to streaming, where potential audiences won’t have to risk quite so much money—or be forced to suffer any time outside of the house. I’m not sure that prognosis is the most clear-sighted, though. It seems more likely that studios, looking at their earnings reports, will gradually stop making these films at all.

    Which would be a loss for everyone. The studios would forsake whatever value acclaim (and, yes, awards) confers on their company. Artists would lose the opportunity to, well, be artists on the scale that best fits their vision. Audiences would be denied intellectually, emotionally, even politically challenging work. Even those who would skip these movies no matter where they’re playing will eventually suffer; styles, modes, and techniques that first develop in smaller films do trickle their way up to the blockbusters.

    The most immediate challenge in preserving the fall movie tradition is convincing the megacorporations who own a large swath of the industry that there is something to gain with loss-leader filmmaking, as was the calculation of the studios of old. I’m sure some filmmakers and film lovers of tomorrow have been inspired by Marvel movies, but how many more might be hooked by films they feel they’ve discovered, that open their minds to nascent passions of which they were previously unaware? The bracing social commentary of Tár, the poignant artistic memoir of The Fabelmans, the righteous empathy of Women Talking, the graceful humanity of Empire of Light—and the even more underwatched but still worthy projects from directors not named Spielberg or Mendes.

    Maybe the most effective appeal would be to simple self-regard: Hollywood loves celebrating itself, reveling in its own mythos. What will that identity be in the future, though, if studios have reduced their output to boilerplate franchise movies whose identities have blurred into one indistinct mass? Perhaps studio executives could persuade Wall Street and shareholders that an aura of magic and majesty, maintained year after year by the stuff that supposedly nobody cares about, is necessary for survival of the business. Box office returns are nice—as are perks and bonuses and dividends—but can you really put a price on legacy?

    Richard Lawson

    Source link

  • ‘Avatar’ Makes Second Lap While ‘Babylon’ Bombs at Christmas Box Office

    ‘Avatar’ Makes Second Lap While ‘Babylon’ Bombs at Christmas Box Office

    There wasn’t much sunny about this past weekend at the box office. A devastating storm and extremely low temperatures across much of the nation put a bit of a chill on the idea of moviegoing. Hell, I don’t know about you, but I came up with excuses to put off taking out the trash! Theater owners were reportedly already anticipating lower numbers, since Christmas Eve and Christmas Day fell on a Saturday and Sunday, which reduced the number of days that most people would have off from work. As such, the three new major studio releases, Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance With Somebody, and Babylon found themselves iced out.

    There is, however, one success story: Avatar: The Way of Water

    Arctic blasts and worrisome flu chatter are apparently no match for James Cameron and his interplanetary adventures, with the second chapter of his saga bringing in an additional $56 million domestically in its second weekend. That number is likely to balloon to $84 million, factoring in Friday and Monday, all for a domestic total of $278 million. 

    The international box office for the picture—which is being exhibited in 3D, premium large format, and, in some cases, a controversial high frame rate—is now estimated at $855 million. For any other movie, the producers and studio heads would be swimming in champagne, but as Cameron himself put it, his goal is “to be the third or fourth highest-grossing film in history. That’s your threshold. That’s your break even.” Most analysts have put that number at $2 billion.

    Rarely does receipt-watching have this much drama to it, but it’s also rare for a writer-director-inventor-explorer to go on record as calling his project “the worst business case in movie history.” He’s a little less than halfway to the finish line after two weeks, and he’s got history behind him—the first Avatar was a slow-and-steady earner over many weeks, as was this summer’s Top Gun: Maverick.

    Also, the tale of Jake Sully, the tulkun, and the ava-cloned Col. Quaritch does not have much in the way of competition for many coming weeks, as evidenced by the three other studio releases this weekend, all of which did poorly. Puss In Boots tallied $11.3 million this weekend (accruing $24.6 million since its mid-week opening), which isn’t exactly chump change but is still low for a family film in the Shrek-verse. The last Puss In Boots ultimately made $554 million globally, but that was back in 2011. 

    Meanwhile, Naomi Ackie’s turn as pop legend Whitney Houston came in third place, with an estimated $7.5 to $9 million through Monday. By and large, few critics have been championing the latest music biopic, and it currently has a 46 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and a 55 on Metacritic. 

    Worst, through, was the awards season hopeful Babylon, Damien Chazelle’s kaleidoscopic three-hour ode to early Hollywood, starring A-listers Margot Robbie and Brad Pitt. The picture is a floparoonie (to put it in the terms the characters might use), earning a disastrous $5.3 through Monday. Though some critics were into it, it received a C+ on Cinemascore, which polls exiting ticket buyers. 

    This is not the best news for Chazelle, whose last picture, First Man, did not exactly achieve escape box office velocity. Maybe he should have done what James Cameron did, and shoot nearly all of his next picture (and even a high percentage of the one after that) before this one hit screens. 

    Jordan Hoffman

    Source link