Jump to content

Eric Prime

Junior Admin
  • Posts

    37,235
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    455

Everything posted by Eric Prime

  1. X-post from the Tracking Thread. Things looking good! Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Greater Philadelphia Area Seat Report T-1 and Counting Sellouts Showings Seats Sold Total Seats Perct Sold TOTALS 0 285 13089 47782 27.39% Total Seats Sold Today: 1,494 Comp 0.499x of Spider-Man: No Way Home T-1 (24.97M) 1.328x of The Batman T-1 (28.68M) 0.756x of Doctor Strange 2 T-1 (27.2M) 1.229x of Thor 4 T-1 (35.64M)
  2. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Greater Philadelphia Area Seat Report T-1 and Counting Sellouts Showings Seats Sold Total Seats Perct Sold TOTALS 0 285 13089 47782 27.39% Total Seats Sold Today: 1,494 Comp 0.499x of Spider-Man: No Way Home T-1 (24.97M) 1.328x of The Batman T-1 (28.68M) 0.756x of Doctor Strange 2 T-1 (27.2M) 1.229x of Thor 4 T-1 (35.64M)
  3. And if you have an hour and 20 minutes to kill before you go see the movie, I also recommend this stunning video essay analyzing the original 2018 Ryan Coogler classic warts and all. Thank you to @Blankments once again for sharing this video in the Telegram chat, because this is a wonderful look into what makes Black Panther such a unique film, good and bad, to me and millions around the world.
  4. And while we are here, before things get started, just a reminder that the Super BOFFIES, celebrating 10 years of the annual BOFFY Awards, are almost here! You have until Monday, November 14 to submit your ballot to the lovely and beautiful @The Panda and @Blankments. For more information, visit the following thread: Likewise, my third director countdown thread, this time focusing on the Coen Brothers, is also still accepting submissions until Sunday, November 27. As of now, I have just nine submissions, so your entry could change everything. And with a minimum of five movies to put on your list, you have no excuse not to submit. Support me, @Blankments, and @The Panda and vote, vote, vote!
  5. NO WOMAN NO CRY Whenever the time comes to make these big, lavish, self-indulgent introductory pieces when a big weekend thread comes around, I try to look at the film from a broad perspective to appeal to everybody. But I think for something like this, I need to talk about my anecdotal experience when it comes to Wakanda Forever’s 2018 predecessor. Like many, I was beyond hyped for Ryan Coogler’s afrofuturist epic. The trailers were so exciting and epic, Black Panther was already an iconic character thanks to his appearance in Captain America: Civil War, the Kendrick Lamar-backed soundtrack was full of bops, and the massive promotion across all facets of the Disney empire, at the very least, made people aware the film was coming out. And I was one of the special few who saw it early. Thursday, February 15, at 7 PM to be exact. I was in a packed auditorium, surrounded by Marvel fans and casual viewers alike, all glued into seeing what this superhero movie had to offer. The lights went down and for 134 minutes, I was entranced, astonished, and in awe of what I saw. We’ve all had those moviegoing experiences you never forget. Those experiences where you are so in awe with the film you’re watching that you can still capture the excitement of seeing it for the first time. For some people this was with Star Wars, and for others it was Lord of the Rings. And if we’re talking recently, there’s Avengers: Endgame or Spider-Man: No Way Home. And for me, Black Panther is probably my favorite moviegoing experience ever. No other film since then has given me the same sense of adrenaline, joy, excitement, and happiness that Black Panther did. The minute I walked out of that theater, I knew I saw an instant classic. And to this day, Black Panther is not just my favorite Marvel movie, but one of my favorite blockbusters ever, and one of my favorite movies period. Everything you could want in a blockbuster is in here and it’s done with pure care and affection. I love the action, the production design, the actors, the characters, the costumes, the music, the cinematography, the story. Everything about it was grand, majestic, and beautifully told in a way that, yes, is familiar to MCU conventions and tropes. Yet the way Coogler crafted his film and told his story, it felt like I was being told this story for the first time. And in many ways, with regards to the film’s representation, it kind of was like I was hearing it for the first time. Since the early days of Birth of a Nation, Hollywood has done little to truly represent folks of the African diaspora. Their stories are often slave or civil rights stories, or the characters are either sidelined to the story or lean on false stereotypes. But Black Panther went away from all of that. This was a film that celebrated everything wonderful and amazing about Black people. Their culture, their legacy, their history, their strengths, their art, their intellect, their bravery, their power. All with little to no stereotypes and an ensemble cast full of the most dynamic and memorable figures ever seen in modern blockbusters. All the while, the film looks into fascinating politics through the antagonist Erik Killmonger. Despite being the villain, his desires and wants for Wakanda to do more than sit in the sidelines and allow decades, centuries of oppression towards people of their skin color...those are valid and impactful feelings. The film not only celebrated the beauty of Africa and its people, but tackled issues that are still poignant and relevant to this very day, while still being an exciting and fun blockbuster extravaganza. Its powerful themes and messages were understandable to children, but non-patronizing towards adults. That is a hard balancing act to do, but Ryan Coogler did it. And sure, at the end of the day, it’s not really revelatory. It’s still nothing more than a corporate toy commercial at the end of the day and we can argue those nuances of Disney making a Black Power movie until the end of time. But even toy commercials can have strong artistic value to them. And frankly, if a white guy like me can adore Black Panther and its powerful statements and visuals, I can only imagine how wonderful it was to the people this movie truly represented. And the public, no matter who you were, adored the film. It earned the fifth-biggest opening in history, was #1 at the box office for five weeks in a row, and became one of only three movies at the time to earn $700 million at the domestic box office. It made more in North American than goddamned Infinity War. Black Panther was so good and so iconic that even a movie that combined all the superheroes could not match it. It’s still surreal to me. And yeah Infinity War did more worldwide, but Black Panther’s $1.35 billion still made it one of the biggest Marvel movies ever made. And to this day, Black Panther is still lauded and adored as one of, if not the best thing to ever have the Marvel Studios name across it. And to this day, even with your Infinity Wars and Doctor Stranges and Ragnaroks, Black Panther will be the film that will have the longest legacy. Long after we are gone, the new generations will treat Black Panther as this generation’s Star Wars. The new face of global blockbuster cinema, and what blockbusters could and should always strive to be. With this massive success and intense adoration, everybody wanted a sequel the second they left the theater. And finally the sequel arrived four years later. But the world has a nasty habit of changing. And the last four years had a lot of changes. The Marvel Cinematic Universe has been bombarded with Disney+ television shows, the current crop of MCU films have largely been divisive among the fanbase, and T’Challa has passed on to the shock of everybody, resulting in a massive story change, while the supposed Black Panther has been outed as an alleged antivaxxer. All of this has certainly been a headache for Ryan Coogler and his creative team, but thankfully reviews are strong across the board and that this is a loving tribute to the legend that was Chadwick Boseman. And in the end, this is the only thing that really matters from all this. So to recap the rules real quick... 1. ABSOLUTELY NO SPOILERS. NOT EVEN SPOILERS POSTED UNDER SPOILER TAGS. This rule also applies to other movies in theaters and films/shows recently released on streaming. So no Black Adam spoilers, no Banshees of Inisherin spoilers, no Enola Holmes 2 spoilers, no Andor spoilers, no White Lotus spoilers, etc. If you do spoil something here, you will be banned. No exceptions. We do have a spoiler thread for Wakanda Forever right here for you to go nuts in. 2. GOOD VIBES! Big weekends like these are supposed to be fun. So don’t be a party pooper and ruin things for everybody. No matter what the film opens to, it's still gonna make bank, we still have plenty of Marvel goodness along the way, no need to predict the end times, and so on and so forth. Try to have fun. 3. THE REPORT AND IGNORE BUTTONS ARE YOUR FRIENDS. 4. IS OFF-TOPIC DISCUSSION OKAY? Off-topic discussions are okay in situations where there's downtime and there aren't any numbers, so long as they don’t get heated. But when numbers are coming up and things are getting busy, then keep off-topic things down to the minimum. And lastly... 5. DON'T BE A DICK. So now... WITHOUT FURTHER ADO LET'S DO THIS SHIT
  6. Moderation We have a Spider-Man thread where this content is more appropriate. Please move discussion there
  7. Quorum Updates The Fabelmans T-14: 11.89% Awareness, 4.83 Interest Strange World T-14: 29.4%, 5.26 Violent Night T-23: 32.31%, 5.66 Chevalier T-149: 14.6%, 4.69 Barbie T-254: 33.06%, 4.44 Black Panther: Wakanda Forever T-2: 66.05% Awareness, 6.93 Interest *Note that Black Panther: Wakanda Forever's Final numbers are subject to change* Final General Awareness: 100% chance of 100M General Interest: 100% chance of 100M DC/MCU Awareness: 100% chance of 100M DC/MCU Interest: 100% chance of 100M The Menu T-9: 23.4% Awareness, 5.32 Interest *Note that The Menu's Final numbers are subject to change* Final General Awareness: 4% chance of double-digit opening General Interest: 68% chance of double-digit opening Original - Low Awareness: 10% chance of 5M, 0% chance of double digits Original - Low Interest: 64% chance of 5M, 36% chance of double digits M3gan T-58: 32.73% Awareness, 5.77 Interest T-60 General Awareness: 96% chance of double-digit opening, 85% chance of 20M, 77% chance of 30M General Interest: 93% chance of double-digits, 86% chance of 20M, 79% chance of 30M Horror Awareness: 100% chance of 30M Horror Interest: 100% chance of 40M
  8. I mean I'm still thinking around 240M for Mission: Impossible, which is still a solid increase from Fallout. But the thing with me is that Mission: Impossible is already very established and people already know whether they like these movies or not and whether they will check it out. With Top Gun, all you needed was seeing the original movie to get up to speed. And even then, it was designed where you didn't have to see the first film to get what's going on. By this point, everybody knows about Mission: Impossible, what's in it, and whether they want to see it or not. It's a bigger hurdle to get casuals invested in yet another sequel, especially since, at least so far, this looks to be more of the same that people expect and are familiar with. Only way you can really boost interest further is if you got a major star on the level of Cruise in the movie, like Denzel as the bad guy or whatever, but that's not what they are doing here. Anecdotal, but I took my parents to see Top Gun: Maverick and they absolutely loved it. But I probably won't take them to Dead Reckoning because they never watched the other Mission: Impossible movies and they don't really have a strong urge to. That means something.
  9. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Greater Philadelphia Area Seat Report T-2 and Counting Sellouts Showings Seats Sold Total Seats Perct Sold TOTALS 0 279 11595 47417 24.45% Total Seats Sold Today: 920 Comp 0.492x of Spider-Man: No Way Home T-2 (24.6M) 1.328x of The Batman T-2 (28.68M) 0.746x of Doctor Strange 2 T-2 (26.86M) 1.256x of Thor 4 T-2 (36.43M)
  10. THR (positive): https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-reviews/black-panther-wakanda-forever-ryan-coogler-sequel-1235256005/ EW (B+): https://ew.com/movies/movie-reviews/black-panther-wakanda-forever-review/ The Guardian (3/5): https://www.theguardian.com/film/2022/nov/08/black-panther-wakanda-forever-review-chadwick-boseman-letitia-wright-marvel Collider (B+): https://collider.com/black-panther-wakanda-forever-review/
  11. The Verge (positive): https://www.theverge.com/23435603/black-panther-wakanda-forever-review Indiewire (B+): https://www.indiewire.com/2022/11/black-panther-wakanda-forever-review-1234779954/ USA Today (3.5/4): https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/movies/2022/11/08/black-panther-wakanda-forever-movie-review/8294162001/
  12. Movie Title Distributor Gross %YD %LW Theaters Per Theater Total Gross Days In Release - (1) Black Adam Warner Bros. $1,320,000 -75% -33% 3,985 $331 $138,437,326 18 - (5) Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile Sony Pictures $205,000 -80% +7% 3,005 $68 $36,779,626 32 - (11) The Woman King Sony Pictures $80,000 -69% -24% 1,075 $74 $66,006,115 53 3 $1,605,000
  13. That's because all 20th Century Studios movies don't have the Disney logo in front of them. Free Guy doesn't have it, The Last Duel doesn't have it, Prey doesn't have it, even Home Sweet Home Alone doesn't have it. It's the same thing that's done with Marvel and Lucasfilm. James Cameron didn't make any choice, and I doubt Shawn Levy or whoever demanded the Disney logo stay away from his movie.
  14. We waited endlessly for a trailer only to get a one-minute tease that tells people nothing with only a month to go? What was the point in waiting this long?
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Guidelines. Feel free to read our Privacy Policy as well.