It’s that time of the year again. Here are the links to the previous two threads I’ve started:
2013 2014
We have a couple of Marvel movies: The Avengers 2 and Ant-Man, a Sony prequel, a Pixar film, other sequels, and a few reboots. Who will make the most?
Avengers 2. The answer is going to be Avengers 2. Everyone else is playing for second.
For the second spot I’m thinking Pixar or Minions. Despicable Me 2 pulled in ~350 million in ten weeks while the last Pixar movie, Monsters University, made 262 million.
How is this even a question? Avengers grossed over $600 million at the box office. Unless Joss completely falls flat on his face, this is going to pass half a billion, easy.
This would only be a contest if Star Wars were coming out in the Summer (I wish it was, all the others came out Memorial Day Weekend or there abouts). Disney is going to have fat pockets this year. The Conspiracy Theorists in me wonders if they are setting Tomorrowland (which looks interesting) up to fail to help with their taxes :).
It’s too bad that Furious 7 came out too early to be a “summer” movie (though to be fair, so did Age of Ultron)…it just cleared $1.5B worldwide and may well beat AoU.
But that said, “Are Of Ultron” is the obvious choice because Marvel movies make tons of money and “Avengers” made a bajillion dollars. What movie you’d want to see isn’t a relevant point here; this is like Family Feud, you have to guess what OTHER people are going to see, and they’re going to see Age of Ultron, which by all accounts isn’t a very good movie but it’s what people will pay to see.
Big time box office is often a case of what franchise is popular; just as McDonald’s will make more money this year than the best restaurant in New York City, the Avengers franchise makes a pile of money. Almost every person in the world who has seen both movies agrees “Mad Max: Fury Road” is a way, way better movie than Age of Ultron, and it’s also a blow-em-up-good film, but it won’t make half as much because the franchise is less popular.
Just to put some numbers on that, Rotten Tomatoes has it at 74%, with an audience rating of 88%, Metacritic (which weights by reviewer score, rather than being a binary liked it/didn’t like it scheme) has it at 66%, and IMDB has it at an 8/10.