Cats Box Office Loss
Variety is reporting that Tom Hoopers ambitious big screen adaptation of Cats will likely lose 100 million at the box office when.
Cats box office loss. Based on Andrew Lloyd Webbers long-running Broadway musical of the same name Cats struggled to find its footing after its first trailer dropped back in July confusing viewers. In its sophomore outing the film was relegated to No. And now as the film exits its second box office weekend Universal knows that worst of all Cats is going to be a big financial black eye.
According to Deadline its expected that Cats will lose at least 70 million for Universal after everything is all said and done not just at the box office but also when you incorporate the ancillary money from rentals and Blu-ray purchases. The movie is expected to lose 70 million and theater chain Alamo Drafthouse is selling out special rowdy screenings where audiences get to cosplay and yell at the screen. Insiders say Universal Pictures is on track to lose at a minimum 71 million from the holiday box-office bomb Cats Cats is a flop not just among critics but also at the box office.
After Cats failed to gain traction over the holidays the movie could lose 100 million. At present the musical has grossed just 20 million. If studios want to release weird then it is probably a better idea to do that around Valentines Day.
The movie according to IMDB cost 95 million. Cats dismal box office performance its headed for a hundred million dollar loss is just further evidence that the folks that made it never understood why the original was so popular in the first place. Biggest box office bombs Title Year Net production budget millions Worldwide gross millions Estimated loss millions Ref.
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen. Cats Box Office Is Set To Lose Over 70 Million Music. According to a new report Cats is now expected to lose around 71 million at the box office based on long-term financial projects.
Cats is a bad movie. Nominal Adjusted for inflation The 13th Warrior. And Ireland bringing its total worldwide haul to 109 million.