I am a youth pastor and a car guy I love God and my wife and 2 rad sons.

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

this is how a terrible movie can be 1st!

Why 'Avatar' is actually the 26th biggest movie
Boxoffice is arguably more straightforward to report than TV ratings. You have this weekly Top 10 list of returns, you compare each movie to the other movies. TV ratings are a murky swamp where one network's hit is another network's flop and context is not just a factor, but often the entire story.

Yet one respect in which boxoffice reporting is pretty odd -- emphasizing ticket grosses yet rarely mentioning ticket sales. That would be like always reporting how many ad dollars sold off "Lost" and not mentioning the number of viewers that actually watched the show. With everybody reporting how "Avatar" is The Biggest Movie of All Time based on grosses ($1.859 billion and counting), it's important to remember how rising ticket prices skew the returns.

Here's the Top 20 movies of all time ... by number of tickets sold:

1 "Gone With the Wind" (1939) 202,044,600
2 "Star Wars" (1977) 178,119,600
3 "The Sound of Music" (1965) 142,415,400
4 "E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial" (1982) 141,854,300
5 "The Ten Commandments" (1956) 131,000,000
6 "Titanic" (1997) 128,345,900
7 "Jaws" (1975) 128,078,800
8 "Doctor Zhivago" (1965) 124,135,500
9 "The Exorcist" (1973) 110,568,700
10 "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" (1937) 109,000,000
11 "101 Dalmatians" (1961) 99,917,300
12 "The Empire Strikes Back" (1980) 98,180,600
13 "Ben-Hur" (1959) 98,000,000
14 "Return of the Jedi" (1983) 94,059,400
15 "The Sting" (1973) 89,142,900
16 "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (1981) 88,141,900
17 "Jurassic Park" (1993) 86,205,800
18 "The Graduate" (1967) 85,571,400
19 "Star Wars: Episode I" (1999) 84,825,800
20 "Fantasia" (1941) 83,043,500

"Avatar," despite topping the worldwide gross list, by and by, is only No. 26 on the ticket sales list with 76,421,000 sold ... at least, so far...

3 Comments:

Blogger Papa Scott said...

That was some mighty fine research peter. your calculus was bang on.

How did you decied to use mohrs equation to determine the interrationality of the increased 3D prising on avatar vs the four times gone with the wind was released over a 20 year period?

Next time it would be neat to see if Plank's constant would change the results.

flochb

3:53 PM

 
Blogger Monty P said...

Sure, Scott. Have fun with that.

Pete, that's always been my thought, too. Haven't bothered to do the research, but glad someone has.

My sign-in seems oddly appropriate: wityp

9:25 AM

 
Blogger Pants since 1986 said...

I just think that it was a fine movie but nothing spectacular, and that people need to get a reality check if they are finding themselves depressed because they can't go to pandora and that it's beauty will never be here.
IT'S A MOVIE, PEOPLE!

11:19 PM

 

Post a Comment

<< Home