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Movie theater attendance in 2014 lowest it's been in 20 years
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:13 pm
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:13 pm
quote:
Roughly 1.26 billion people went out to the movies in the past year, the lowest figure since 1995’s 1.21 billion. The National Association Of Theater Owners (or NATO, as it probably doesn’t want to be known) hasn’t calculated the average ticket price for the year yet, but it’s guessed that attendance is at least 6 percent lower than in 2013.
LINK
Water is wet? How does the movie industry fix this?
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:16 pm to BluegrassBelle
quote:
hasn’t calculated the average ticket price for the year yet, but it’s guessed that attendance is at least 6 percent lower than in 2013.
At least they ID'd one reason.
High ticket prices.
Illegal streaming.
Netflix / Hulu
etc.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:20 pm to BluegrassBelle
quote:
How does the movie industry fix this?
Put out better summer movies.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:22 pm to BluegrassBelle
quote:
How does the movie industry fix this?
Fewer remakes, reboots, sequels, and prequels.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:25 pm to BluegrassBelle
quote:
How does the movie industry fix this?
By letting us pay more money to watch new releases from the comfort of our homes and avoid the TPOS, annoying teens, and gunmen that plague the theaters.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:26 pm to Cs
quote:
How does the movie industry fix this?
Fewer remakes, reboots, sequels, and prequels.
That is really, really dumb. These are what people are going to see. People rarely go to see original stuff. Look at the top 10 grosses and the majority are remakes, reboots, sequels, and prequels. People won't magically start going to see movies they aren't seeing now when you take away the movies they are going to most often.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:41 pm to BluegrassBelle
quote:
How does the movie industry fix this?
Make better movies. There were easily 3-4 times this year where my wife and I were in the mood to go to the movies and then looked at what was out in the theater and nothing worthwhile was playing.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 3:58 pm to BluegrassBelle
Cheaper tickets, better in-theater experience.
Or stream the movies to my house.
I basically only go see movies that feel like 'theater movies' – movies that are a different experience on the big screen. Interstellar was the only non-early bird movie I saw this year.
Or stream the movies to my house.
I basically only go see movies that feel like 'theater movies' – movies that are a different experience on the big screen. Interstellar was the only non-early bird movie I saw this year.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:06 pm to BluegrassBelle
They make 4 or 5 blockbuster movies per year and the rest are shite. Then half the award season type movies only play in about 4 major cities.
Today for example, if you're in the mood to go to the movies and aren't into The Hobbit, you're screwed.
Today for example, if you're in the mood to go to the movies and aren't into The Hobbit, you're screwed.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:09 pm to BluegrassBelle
Lower ticket prices.
I'm really picky with what movies I choose to see in a theater because of the high prices.
I did accidentally buy a ticket to one of those AMC Prime theaters for the Imitation Game last week. Wow, those recliners were very comfortable.
I'm really picky with what movies I choose to see in a theater because of the high prices.
I did accidentally buy a ticket to one of those AMC Prime theaters for the Imitation Game last week. Wow, those recliners were very comfortable.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:20 pm to BluegrassBelle
Movies seem so limited now that TV is putting out more quality shows. I haven't gone to the theater since the first Hobbit came out. I think that I have only downloaded about three or four movies since then that actually got watched.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:21 pm to BluegrassBelle
Not surprising.
My ideas:
1) Create More Value - And this does NOT mean more 3D (which was a recent foray into raising costs to increase revenue). Maybe each showing comes with a local Blu-Tooth wifi code for a one time download and watch. That or something like for every 3 movies you see in a quarter you can watch one movie digitally. SOMETHING bring in a digital artifact from a theater visit. Movie clubs shouldn't be about coming to the theater more often, they SHOULD be about expanding the theater's presence to my living room.
2) Lower ticket prices - Probably not viable, but it would work
3) Stop creating every movie to be a BLOCKBUSTER OR BUST! - This is tiring for movie goers. As much as I love the superhero genre move, not every movie has to be an event.
4) More normal length (100 minutes max), low-key films. This coincides with number 3, but I think the idea that every movie is a 2+ hour EXTRAVAGANZA is also tiring. There's something special about a well constructed, 100 minute film that hits all the right buttons. This is good fodder for that short afternoon or a date. With movies like Interstellar or the Hobbit, I feel like half my day is automatically gone. When you add in drive time, showing up early so you can get good seats, standing in line if it's anywhere near Event weekends, then you're easily looking at a 5 hour affair. I haven't seen the Hobbit yet for this very reason. It just feels like it won't fit my day.
quote:
How does the movie industry fix this?
My ideas:
1) Create More Value - And this does NOT mean more 3D (which was a recent foray into raising costs to increase revenue). Maybe each showing comes with a local Blu-Tooth wifi code for a one time download and watch. That or something like for every 3 movies you see in a quarter you can watch one movie digitally. SOMETHING bring in a digital artifact from a theater visit. Movie clubs shouldn't be about coming to the theater more often, they SHOULD be about expanding the theater's presence to my living room.
2) Lower ticket prices - Probably not viable, but it would work
3) Stop creating every movie to be a BLOCKBUSTER OR BUST! - This is tiring for movie goers. As much as I love the superhero genre move, not every movie has to be an event.
4) More normal length (100 minutes max), low-key films. This coincides with number 3, but I think the idea that every movie is a 2+ hour EXTRAVAGANZA is also tiring. There's something special about a well constructed, 100 minute film that hits all the right buttons. This is good fodder for that short afternoon or a date. With movies like Interstellar or the Hobbit, I feel like half my day is automatically gone. When you add in drive time, showing up early so you can get good seats, standing in line if it's anywhere near Event weekends, then you're easily looking at a 5 hour affair. I haven't seen the Hobbit yet for this very reason. It just feels like it won't fit my day.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:25 pm to LasVegasTiger
1. Most Movies Suck
2. Home Theater Systems are far better viewing experience
3. the types of crowd that typically goes to movies makes it miserable
4. Prices are ridiculous
5. Most Movies Suck hard
2. Home Theater Systems are far better viewing experience
3. the types of crowd that typically goes to movies makes it miserable
4. Prices are ridiculous
5. Most Movies Suck hard
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:28 pm to Tiger Ryno
quote:
1. Most Movies Suck
2. Home Theater Systems are far better viewing experience
3. the types of crowd that typically goes to movies makes it miserable
4. Prices are ridiculous
5. Most Movies Suck hard
I really do think this is a symptom of the industry that's out of theaters' control. I mean, how many "Funniest Movie of the Year!" are there? "Best Movie of the year!" ? The hype cycle kills reactions, tires people out, and is just ridiculous. It's all empty speak once you've heard it for the 5th time.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:35 pm to Freauxzen
quote:
4) More normal length (100 minutes max), low-key films. This coincides with number 3, but I think the idea that every movie is a 2+ hour EXTRAVAGANZA is also tiring. There's something special about a well constructed, 100 minute film that hits all the right buttons. This is good fodder for that short afternoon or a date. With movies like Interstellar or the Hobbit, I feel like half my day is automatically gone. When you add in drive time, showing up early so you can get good seats, standing in line if it's anywhere near Event weekends, then you're easily looking at a 5 hour affair. I haven't seen the Hobbit yet for this very reason. It just feels like it won't fit my day.
this times 100x. I cannot sit still for 2 hrs, let alone the 2.5/3 hr movies you see.
I can do it at home but we pause it half way and take a 10-15 minutes break. Pee, open a beer, hit the bong a few times.
with that said, I see 2-3 movies a year in theaters and I don't see that changing. Going to the movie sucks due to annoying teenagers, giggling and texting through the whole movie.
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:37 pm to Freauxzen
yep. the bottom line is this: it better be extremely interesting to me to make me want to get in my car and drive to the movies and shell out $15. I haven't been to a theater since the last Batman movie and I regret it because it too, sucked.
The next time you'll catch me in a theater will be Dec 18, 2015 for Star Wars
The next time you'll catch me in a theater will be Dec 18, 2015 for Star Wars
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:39 pm to Tiger Ryno
quote:
Tiger Ryno
Where the TDKR touch you?
Posted on 1/5/15 at 4:40 pm to BluegrassBelle
The wife check out at least one movie a month, but we only see movies at Alamo Draft House or IPIC.
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