Mark Wahlberg Canine Pic ‘Arthur The King’ Gets Scraps At The Box Office: Here’s Why

Movies

How does an A CinemaScore and 4 1/2 star PostTrak movie with a major star and a dog underdeliver at the box office?

The adventure sports charged, doggie-with-a-heart title Arthur the King from Lionsgate had no chance of winning a crown this weekend with an $8M-$10M projection, however, many were expecting this well received movie to come in at the top of expectations. It did not with a $7.5M opening.

Also, the misfiring of A CinemaScore, mid-budget movies at the box office is becoming something of a trend. Read on.

Arthur the King‘s underperformance had to do with the fact that it looked ripe for streaming by today’s standards, and not theatrical, right? That’s why people didn’t show up? Yeah, but that’s not 100% of the reason.

True, stars need to have a come-to-Jesus with themselves when making streaming movies in conjunction with theatrical titles: Do you water down your marquee image by making yourself available for free at home? Wahlberg’s action title The Family Plan was AppleTV+’s most watched movie ever reportedly. To paraphrase/quote Sidney Poitier’s advice to Denzel Washington, “If they see you for free all week, they won’t pay to see you on the weekend”. Hollywood stars should get tattoos of that.

Channing Tatum in 'Dog'

However, dog movies are a business on the big screen — and still are, going all the way back to Rin Tin Tin, Benji and Old Yeller. This despite various genres (i.e. comedies, romcoms, middle budget movies, which Arthur the King is) being gobbled up by streaming, thus conditioning audiences to stay home, and avoid theaters.

Case in point: A recent doggie feature success is MGM’s Channing Tatum movie Dog which was made for $15M, opened to $14.9M and legged its way to $61M stateside, $84.8M global. A definite bow wow post pandemic in 2022 at a time when audiences were slowly coming back to cinemas. In fact, Dog was seen as one of the catalysts that brought women back to cinemas, the audience one of the most jitterish to return post Covid (Dog pulled in 54% women, 73% over 25).

Prior to Dog, as far as non-IP canine movies go, pre-Covid there was Warner Bros’ Max which opened to $12.1M and got to $42.6M domestic back in 2015. Going way back in the mega pre-streaming days of 2008, Disney had Beverly Hills Chihuahua which posted a lucrative $29.3M opening, $94.5M domestic take, and $149.2M global, and spawned a sequel.

Arthur the King, which was co-financed by Entertainment One (eOne) pre-sales and Tucker Tooley Entertainment, had a cool adventure bike racing element to it. Lionsgate in trailers clearly sold it on the big screen of that. So what gives? Why did Arthur the King fall apart?

Sources close to the studio scream profit on Arthur the King which is a disingenuous victory lap to take on an A CinemaScore movie that fell short, even if it’s true. Lionsgate only had a P&A commitment on Arthur the King, with an ad budget north of $20M+, and no minimum guarantee. That’s a very low threshold for them, a feasible one to cash cow off of. As we mentioned a few weeks ago, the streaming rattled theatrical marketplace for studios has become about bare minimum P&As to get titles over the hump of theatrical into home entertainment to where the real money is. Theatrical on these mid-budgeted titles has become an advertising mechanism for home sales. Arthur the King is on a 31-day theatrical window (not 17-day).

Lionsgate in its marketing chiefly went after male sports audiences, not family or faith-based (Wahlberg himself can pull in a quotient of that crowd), and that’s where this movie is coming up short on its gross, I’m told. It didn’t get the typical Saturday matinee family bump. The choice by the studio not to double down on family audiences stemmed from the fact that the movie centers around a troubled, haggard dog, not a cute one. However, the Belgian malinois in Dog wasn’t the prettiest Hollywood star, and he also played opposite a beefcake with abs and guns. Together they did business. Yesterday’s grosses for Arthur the King at $2.8M were down -6% against $3M Friday (which included $825K in previews from both Thursday and Monday secret screenings).

“This is a movie like Boys in the Boat which could have played to the middle of the country,” says one box office source. Also missing from Arthur the King‘s grosses is Canada. The movie was sold exclusively to Prime Video there; the pic debuting on the streamer at a later date. West and South were the best regions for Arthur the King, however Northeast was weak, and I’m told that’s because spring break wasn’t in full force there. To date in March, this weekend showed the most K-12 schools off (28%) as well as colleges (40%), more than Dune: Part Two‘s opening weekend. Interestingly enough, Harkins theaters and Phoenix overperformed wildly on Arthur the King. The movie played well in the chain’s Monday Secret screening series, while Phoenix had a rainy cold front over the weekend which sent moviegoers into theaters. In addition, the circuit overindexes on dog-themed and Wahlberg films. They boasted a near 3% share on Tatum’s Dog.  

But there’s more on Arthur the King. Despite Lionsgate targeting the sole sports demo, the movie was always a bit of a feathered fish. The real cost of the movie before presales, I’m told, was $40M. That was too big a price of a movie for this conceit. It’s one of the reasons why Paramount pushed away from the title in addition to the movie not being a prime vehicle for Wahlberg’s crowd who savor him in action roles. Arthur the King on paper was akin to TV reality show Amazing Race with low stakes (how suspenseful is stopping the race?). Also, for rival movie marketing execs in its sports angle, the movie wasn’t an exact slam dunk with family audiences. eOne presales for Arthur the King were $18M. Domestic was shopped around after Paramount dropped the project. I hear MGM expressed interest, but Lionsgate finally acquired the movie in a deal that wrapped prior to the eOne merger. Tooley previously had a deal with eOne.

Some sources also believe this weekend wasn’t the right weekend for Arthur the King, that it would have fared better at Easter or later; that is if Lionsgate chose to lean into faith-based and family. There’s nothing for families over Easter weekend outside fanboy skewing Godzilla x King: The New Empire. In addition, currently, there’s a slew of faith-based titles in the market with Ordinary Angels, Cabrini and the Chosen episodes.

Lionsgate recently underdelivered on another A+ movie, Ordinary Angels, which opened to $6.1M; we’ve seen their Kingdom Story fare do a lot better with the faith-based. The studio is very frugal when it comes to marketing, reportedly underspending by $40M by average studio P&A standards to get John Wick: Chapter 4 to its record franchise domestic opening of $73.8M. Reportedly, Lionsgate’s Plane ($32.1M domestic, $74.5M worldwide) made $35M in profit, a great deal of cash to cover 50% of the studio’s $70M overhead. While the optics of each film at the box office may not show it (go figure), the studio prides itself on keeping a scrappy business formula of low costs and high margins.

Per sources, a $10M opening on Arthur the King would have yielded a $35M-$40M domestic final result , versus the $20M+ domestic it’s looking at now.

While studios still embrace the theatrical downstream ancillary business model post Covid, and are making the most financially in their attempts to harness streaming-distracted moviegoers, unfortunate quandaries remain for mid-sized movies and the filmmakers behind them: Will motion picture studios ever spend enough again to turn them into compelling events? Or is the audience for smaller movies, outside of horror, never coming back?

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

What’s likely to move the market
Discovering Le Carl Gustaf, St. Barth
New Study Shows Readers Can’t Tell the Difference Between Shakespeare and ChatGPT
Yellowstone Season 5 Episode 10 Took Some Long Detours Before Getting To The Beginning Of The End For Jamie And Beth
Unique yacht-style cruises in Europe, South America and beyond