So in terms of movies made with the profit (since that's what they largely use the profit for):Fixer wrote: ↑Tue Jun 19, 2018 6:21 pmIt's probably worth mentioning the actual profits from the movies as well as the revenue.Worffan101 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 19, 2018 4:57 pm On one hand, tie-ins are typically explicitly noncanon or semi-canon, so I usually don't have much sympathy for people busy whining about that stuff being contradicted. Sometimes, canon marches on.
On the flip side, that's also lost revenue for Disney, and with TLJ making about 2/3 of TFA's gross and Solo crashing and burning, there is a strong argument to be made that they NEED that revenue.
The real test, though, is going to be Episode 9. Just like BvS killed the DCEU but it was Justice League that took the fall, there's a good chance that TLJ will kill this iteration of Star Wars, and it's Episode 9 that bites it. Basically, if Episode 9 makes lots of money (as in, over 1.5 billion), Kennedy is vindicated and was right the whole time to ignore long-haul fans in favor of attempts at outreach to the public. If it makes a billion or less? Kennedy needs to go.
Also, as for Rey--I liked her OK. She was a little OP in TFA but largely was just ANH Luke with tits. The problem came in TLJ where the casino plot and the constant Kylo Ren shilling took away from her character development.
As a general rule of thumb a movie gets half the box office takings and advertising/marketing is usually the same amount as the production cost. So a movie takes about 4 times its production cost to break even.
With those in mind, estimated profit from the four Disney movies so far:
TFA: $500 million
RO: $100 million
TLJ: £150 million
Solo: -$80 million ( could be far higher depending on reshoot costs)
Outside of that the vast bulk of money brought in my Star Wars before was from the toys and merch sales. Those numbers are harder to get hold of but if they have tanked as badly as they appear to have, the franchise could be making far more serious losses.
TFA: Make and market The Avengers 1.2 times.
RO: Make 2/3 of Captain America
TLJ: Make Captain America
Solo: Losing money.
...yeah, that's a sharp drop. From TFA you have enough to fund and market a couple of passion projects for your studio's big auteur or your next big blockbuster AND give yourself a shiny bonus of a hosue. From TLJ...you can make a mid-range action flick* and try to crowdsource the advertising budget. That's not good.
*Yes, Captain America 1 was much more than just a mid-range action flick and is one of my favorite Marvel movies, but it resembled a midrange action flick in budget.