The live action Little Mermaid is at $543 million globally. Chances are good it won’t crack $600 million.
Reports put the cost of production at around $250 million. The break even point for such a budget is typically $700-750 million. So this movie is on track to lose a cool hundred million dollars, which is bad enough already.
But consider the fact that three previous live action remakes have broken the billion dollar barrier at the box office. In terms of established expectations, Little Mermaid is leaving as much as a quarter to a half a billion dollars on the table.
I blame some of this on the inherently flawed concept. Live action versions of people are obviously fine, and simulated live action versions of cuddly animals are popular. Simulated live action versions of dead-eye fish and creepy sea insects? Not as appealing.
But there’s simply no denying that the unnecessary race swapping of white ginger Ariel to yet another black actress did not go over well with non-woke foreign markets. Asian countries in particular roundly rejected this movie, which is why the international box office fell well short of domestic. This trend was completely reversed with the previous live action remakes, btw.
So yeah, don’t run your retard mouth about shit you don’t understand, whoever you were lol
Just going to say that 543$ million globally is still insane for that garbage. I'm glad it is going to lose money but is still disappointing. Strangely enough, I don't know anyone close to have seen it but I guess large progressive cities are where the money is.
One thing I noticed when I went with the kids to see Mario, the short trailer for the Little Mermaid barely showed the little mermaid, just quick glances and with a blue filter, if you did not look closely you could not tell that it was a black actress.
They're still "losing" money even if the movie goes past breaking even. A savings account makes money by giving you a fraction of a penny on every dollar in interest, but no one calls that a financial success because you could have invested in the S&P 500 and made 12% as annualized average return.