alicat8
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2013
- Messages
- 1,194
Avatar didn't have a lot of repeat business? On which planet? Months after its release, it was only kicked out of IMAX theatres because IMAX was forced to kick it out. They had a contractual agreement with another movie. Every Avatar IMAX screening was still selling out. I know people who went back to see it 3-4 times.
Typcial run? $2.7 billion worldwide is typical? No movie has even come close since then, even with the inflation in 3D ticket prices.
Even if this movie was "only" a hit, rather than the biggest blockbuster ever, it would still lend itself incredibly well to become a land in a theme park. Visually dazzling, an exotic world with fantastic creatures.
In the end, it will come down to execution. I hope that Disney is going all out with this land, spending whatever it takes to create something great. Like they did with Cars Land and RSR.
As I said before, I'm cautiously optimistic, because I know the company has the resources to pull this off, and the movie (and sequels, very likely) offer great potential theme park applications. However, I never judge something before experiencing it first hand. If some of you won't even bother checking it out when it opens, that's fine. That will mean slightly less overwhelming crowds.
Oh, one more thing. Some people seem to be saying "Avatar is old news, people don't care about this IP anymore". Avatar came out in 2009. The sequels will be coming out about the same time as the land opens. Meanwhile, Disney has a huge hit on their hands with 7DMT, a ride based on an IP that debuted in the 1930s. Many kids haven't even seen it. But have you seen the crowds flocking to that ride daily?
Or how about Splash Mountain? Song of the South was a might IP when that ride opened??
Those both had adorable characters that kids love, and especially for Snow White-characters they know even without seeing the movie. Avatar has creepy characters. Also, those are RIDES. We're talking about an entire LAND here. If someone said, "Hey we're gonna tear down part of Frontierland and rename it "Song of the South" Land, I'd be just as against that. I don't care if the movie stayed in theaters for 3 years and made a trillion dollars, it's still not a kids' movie and I still wouldn't want to see an entire land in a family Disney theme park devoted to a non-Disney movie that no one has talked about (except apparently in the non-Disney geek world) since 2010.
