Is the magic officially gone?
Fans, employees, executives and shareholders of the Walt Disney Company alike may be asking themselves that question after yet another Disney movie has come and gone with little fanfare and perhaps even less than ālittleā to show at the box office.
Disneyās āHaunted Mansionā (a reboot of 2003ās āThe Haunted Mansion,ā which is based on the Disney parks attraction of the same name) was always facing an uphill battle ā this IP isnāt exactly Star Wars or Marvel or even Indiana Jones when it comes to relevance or notoriety ā and that was the case before the ongoing writerās and actorās strikes that leaves the movieās stars unable to promote it.
And if any movie couldāve used a jolt of positive PR and promotion, it was probably this one.
The movieās premiere in Anaheim, California, coincided with a bevy of negative-to-okay reviews.
It was not the blockbuster hit it needed to be in terms of critical reception, and several reports from Variety now suggest the movieās commercial reception reflects those lukewarm reviews.
Juxtaposed against its peers particularly highlights the cavernous gulf between flicks.
Per Variety, during Thursday previews, āHaunted Mansionā debuted to $3.1 million at the box office. The current cultural juggernauts, āBarbieā and āOppenheimer,ā clocked in at $21.1 million and $10 million, respectively, on Thursday.
Now, in fairness, that is not a one-to-one-to-one comparison. āThursday previews,ā as Variety describes, are effectively an extension of the more traditional midnight releases. āHaunted Mansionā and its Thursday box office total, effectively, only had a few hours at the end of Thursday to make revenue, while the other two films had the whole day.
Thatās about as much good news as the House of Mouse could get after the underwhelmingĀ totalĀ debut of āHaunted Mansion.ā
Hereās how Variety opens its newest report about this weekendās box office totals: āItās a āBarbenheimerā world and weāre just living in it.ā
And āweā clearly includes Disney, now, because the rest of the box office receipts were not particularly kind to the beleaguered studio.
āHaunted Mansionā opened this weekend (and, in fairness, did finish third in the box office) to the tune of $24.6 million across 3,700 North American theaters.
The film reportedly added another $9.1 million in the international markets.
That $33 million total, however, would need to be replicated several times over for the movie to be profitable, which is a tall task given that box office returns generally diminish week-to-week.
Variety reports that Disney had to spend $150 million to produce the film and ātens of millionsā more on promoting it. Even the most generous interpretation of that would put the filmās price tag at about $170 million.
This box office disaster is hitting Disney at a particularly poor time, as the IMAX CEO recently revealed that his theaters would not be carrying the latest blockbuster Marvel film, āThe Marvels.ā
And that news comes on the heels of the aforementioned Indiana Jones flopping in the box office, and Pixarās āElementalā coming and going with a fizzle (an increasingly common trend at the once-venerable animation studio.)
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
