We collect cookies to analyze our website traffic and performance; we never collect any personal data. Cookie Policy
Accept
Sign In
California Recorder
  • Home
  • Trending
  • California
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Money
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Leadership
Reading: Box Office: ‘Afterlife’ Proves Foreign Moviegoers Don’t Care About ‘Ghostbusters’
Share
California RecorderCalifornia Recorder
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • California
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Money
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Leadership
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2024 California Recorder. All Rights Reserved.
California Recorder > Blog > Business > Box Office: ‘Afterlife’ Proves Foreign Moviegoers Don’t Care About ‘Ghostbusters’
BusinessEntertainment

Box Office: ‘Afterlife’ Proves Foreign Moviegoers Don’t Care About ‘Ghostbusters’

California Recorder
California Recorder
Share
Box Office: ‘Afterlife’ Proves Foreign Moviegoers Don’t Care About ‘Ghostbusters’
SHARE

Ghostbusters, Ghostbusters: Answer the Call and Ghostbusters: Afterlife

Ghetty and Sony

Sony’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife arrives on electronic sell-through (i.e. – “priced to buy VOD”) this morning, following a relatively successful theatrical release. The “legacy sequel,” directed by Jason Reitman (son of Ghostbusters director Ivan Reitman and the guy who directed Juno, Young Adult and The Front Runner) and penned by Gil Kenan (the guy who wrote Monster House), opened in November with $44 million before ending up with $122 million in unadjusted domestic grosses. However, it “only” earned $61.3 million overseas, giving it a current $184.7 million worldwide cume. That’s not bad on a Covid curve (+15% puts the domestic cume at $140 million), but it’s still below the $126 million domestic/$229 million global cume of Ghostbusters: Answer the Call from summer 2016. While Afterlife only cost $75 million while Answer the Call cost $144 million, the result arguably shows that not all American pop culture nostalgia translates overseas.  

Ghostbusters: Answer the Call was, of course, Paul Feig and Katie Dippold’s remake of Ghostbusters, released in summer 2016 amid a ridiculous amount of online handwringing over its gender-swapped cast. You don’t need me to remind you of the outcry and real-world discourse (even then-GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump chimed in), or how the mere notion of casting four female sketch comedians in a NYC-set paranormal comedy (as opposed to the original which cast four male sketch comedians in same) became essentially proof that online trolls and SEO-driven media could impact the online discourse and thus the media-driven narrative about a given film. However, the film still grossed $126 million from a $46 million debut, which was A) 61% more than Adam Sandler’s likeminded Pixels from the previous summer and B) more than any straight-up feature comedy released that year. Alas, it only earned $100 million overseas.  

So, five years later, Ghostbusters: Afterlife gave the fans their own Force Awakens. Starring McKenna Grace, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard and Paul Rudd, the 30-years-later sequel ignored the 2016 remake (which makes sense, since it’s not set in the same continuity) and offered up a comic coming-of-age adventure that portrayed the events of the first Ghostbusters as a kind of generational pop mythology. I’d argue the movie worked well enough on its own terms (Grace is terrific, Rudd is charming and Coon benefits from the film’s willingness to go raw with family estrangement) to survive a third act fan bait-fest. It worked for Ghostbusters fans and for folks who just wanted a funnier (and present-day) riff on Stranger Things or Super 8. However, even with a “course correction” akin to Incredible Hulk (after Hulk) and Man of Steel (after Superman Returns), Ghostbusters: Afterlife earned just $61 million overseas.  

$229 million worldwide for the Kristen Wiig/Melissa McCarthy/Leslie Jones/Kate McKinnon comedy would have been okay on a budget closer to McCarthy’s Spy ($235 million on a $65 million budget in summer 2015) as opposed to Jurassic World. Had the film performed as expected for fantasy franchise flicks, we’d be looking at a $371 million worldwide cume. That’d be at least on par with Batman Begins ($371 million) and Star Trek ($385 million). The Ghostbusters IP is specifically American pop culture, or at least to the extent anyone has fawning “the fantasy saga of my childhood” nostalgia for it. Not unlike Solo ($214 million domestic but just $394 million worldwide), North American moviegoers showed up in respectable numbers while overseas audiences did not. When Sony doubled down on the IP (bringing it Ivan’s son, making a reverential remake of Ghostbusters, emphasizing the iconography, etc.), the overseas grosses, Covid aside, substantially decreased. 

Some of that downturn was due to Covid variables (even while Venom 2, James Bond 25 and Halloween Kills were doing just fine worldwide), but Afterlife still grossed 66% of its box office in North America alone. That’s the reverse of a conventional theatrical performance for a fantasy franchise flick. Moreover, it earned 40% less overseas than the last Ghostbusters movie, showing that some of the overseas interest was in the idea of a big-budget sci-fi comedy starring McCarthy and other well-known comic actresses as opposed to fidelity to the IP. Sony applied the right lessons from Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (which looked appealing to those with no interest in the brand). Unlike Man of Steel or Incredible Hulk, which made 180-degree course-corrections but on the same budget only to earn about equal grosses, Ghostbusters: Afterlife was made cheaply enough to be a hit with identical results.  

That Tom Rothman and friends were smart enough to only spend $75 million on Ghostbusters: Afterlife meant they accounted for, even in non-Covid times, the possibility that audiences outside of North America wouldn’t care about a Ghostbusters legacy sequel any more than they cared about a Han Solo origin story or a LeBron James Space Jam sequel (A New Legacy earned $92 million overseas versus $140 million in 1996 for Space Jam). Ghostbusters grossed $229 million domestic and $53 million overseas in 1984 while Ghostbusters II earned $112 million/$103 million in 1989. Jokes about broadening the international scope aside (“The Spengler kids are going to South Korea!”), the theoretical sequel must not be so expensive that it can’t afford to again be ignored outside of North America. Because the pretty fun Afterlife proved what the pretty funny Answer the Call merely implied: Overseas audiences don’t care about Ghostbusters.  

TAGGED:EntertainmentThe Forbes Journal
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Let’s All Win: How Oprah Helps Inclusive Leaders Grow? Let’s All Win: How Oprah Helps Inclusive Leaders Grow?
Next Article Fanatics Continues Its Makeover Of The Sports-Card Industry With A 0 Million Takeover Of Topps Fanatics Continues Its Makeover Of The Sports-Card Industry With A $500 Million Takeover Of Topps

Editor's Pick

Pop Culture Meets Politics: The Rise of Keith Coleman and Celebrity Endorsements

Pop Culture Meets Politics: The Rise of Keith Coleman and Celebrity Endorsements

In an era where the lines between politics and pop culture are increasingly blurred, a name is emerging that is…

By California Recorder 6 Min Read
Find out how to Discover Money Residence Patrons in Greeley for a Problem-Free Residence Sale
Find out how to Discover Money Residence Patrons in Greeley for a Problem-Free Residence Sale

Should you’re a Greeley, Colorado, home-owner searching for a quick, environment friendly…

3 Min Read
12 Important Downsizing Suggestions from Folks Who’ve Been There
12 Important Downsizing Suggestions from Folks Who’ve Been There

“I can do this and I know my life will be better…

7 Min Read

Latest

Financial Information Roundup: From a BK Whopper to Japanese Rice

Financial Information Roundup: From a BK Whopper to Japanese Rice

Weekly Roundup​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ ​​   Sunday 5.11.25 What a Whopper seems…

May 17, 2025

5 mainstream media figures who ran for workplace as Democrats

Political reporter Hanna Trudo is contemplating…

May 17, 2025

Weight reduction, diabetes medicine could cause temper modifications: What to learn about behavioral unwanted side effects

GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs), drugs…

May 17, 2025

4 Prime We Purchase Homes for Money Corporations in New Haven

Professionals and cons of house-buying corporations…

May 17, 2025

Biden fails to recollect when son Beau died and Trump’s election yr in leaked Hur interview audio

Leaked audio shared by Axios from…

May 17, 2025

You Might Also Like

From Pattaya to the World: Bryan Flowers’ Unstoppable Rise as a Global Entrepreneur
BusinessTrending

From Pattaya to the World: Bryan Flowers’ Unstoppable Rise as a Global Entrepreneur

PATTAYA, THAILAND – May 2025 — What began with a forum, a dream, and £600 in hand has evolved into…

4 Min Read
Wi-fi Logic valued at £3.5bn as founder sells minority stake to Normal Atlantic
Business

Wi-fi Logic valued at £3.5bn as founder sells minority stake to Normal Atlantic

Wi-fi Logic, a British telecoms agency specialising in Web of Issues (IoT) communications, has offered a minority stake to US…

4 Min Read
UK enterprise funding surges at quickest tempo in two years, defying tax hike fears
Business

UK enterprise funding surges at quickest tempo in two years, defying tax hike fears

Enterprise funding within the UK jumped by 5.9% within the first quarter of 2025, marking the quickest tempo of development…

4 Min Read
Gold set for steepest weekly drop in six months as commerce fears ease and greenback strengthens
Business

Gold set for steepest weekly drop in six months as commerce fears ease and greenback strengthens

Gold costs are on track for his or her sharpest weekly decline in six months, weighed down by a stronger…

3 Min Read
California Recorder

About Us

California Recorder – As a cornerstone of excellence in journalism, California Recorder is dedicated to delivering unfiltered world news and trusted coverage across various sectors, including Politics, Business, Technology, and more.

Company

  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement

Contact Us

  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability

Term of Use

  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices

© 2024 California Recorder. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?