Box Office / Photo Credit: Movie News Net
WHAT DOES MOVIE BOX OFFICE MEAN?
(In the Entertainment industry.)
What does movie box office mean?
A box office or ticket office is a place where
tickets are sold to the public for admission to an event. Patrons may perform
the transaction at a countertop, through a hole in a wall or window, or at a
wicket. By extension, the term is frequently used, especially in the context of
the film industry, as a synonym for the amount of business a particular
production, such as a film or theatre show, receives.
Box office business can be measured in the terms of
the number of tickets sold or the amount of money raised by ticket sales
(revenue). The projection and analysis of these earnings is very important for
the creative industries and often a source of interest for fans. This is
predominant in the Hollywood movie industry.
Etymology
The term is attested since 1786, presumably from
sales of boxes (private seating areas in a theatre). The sense of "total sales"
is attested from 1904.
A folk etymology is that this derives from
Elizabethan theatre (i.e. late 16th century), where theatre admission was
collected in a box attached to a long stick, passed around the audience;
comparable to "bottle" in Punch and Judy, where money was collected
in a bottle. However, first attestation is about 200 years later, making this
highly unlikely.
Box office reporting
There are numerous websites that monitor box-office
receipts, such as Box Office, Box Office India, A Box Office, Box Office Mojo,
Koimoi, ShowBIZ Data, and The Numbers. These sites provide box office
information for hundreds of movies. Data for older movies is often incomplete
due to the way box office reporting evolved, especially in the U.S., and the
availability of information prior to the introduction of the internet.
Variety started reporting box office results by
theatre on March 3, 1922 to give exhibitors around the country information on a
film's performance on Broadway, which was often where first run showings of a
film were held. In addition to New York City, they also endeavored to include
all of the key cities in the U.S. in future and initially also reported results
for 10 other cities including Chicago and Los Angeles.
In 1929, the first issue of The Motion Picture
Almanac was released and included a list of the top 104 grossing films for the
past year. In 1932, Variety published the studios' top grossing films of the
year and has maintained this tradition annually since. In 1937, Box Office
magazine began publishing box office reports. Beginning in the 1930s, Box
Office magazine published a Barometer issue in January, which reported the
performance of movies for the year expressed as percentages.
In 1946, Variety started to publish a weekly National
Box Office survey on page 3 indicating the performance of the week's hits and
flops based on the box office results of 25 key U.S. cities.
Later in 1946, Variety published a list of All-Time
Top Grossers with a list of films that had achieved or gave promise of earning
$4,000,000 or more in domestic (U.S. and Canada) rentals. This became a leading
source of data for a film's performance. Variety would publish an updated all-time
list annually for over 50 years, normally in their anniversary edition each
January. The anniversary edition would also normally contain the list of the
top performing films of the year.
In the late 1960s, Variety used an IBM 360 computer to
collate the grosses from their weekly reports of 22 to 24 U.S. cities from
January 1, 1968. The data came from up to 800 theatres which represented around
5% of the U.S. cinema population at the time but around one-third of the total
U.S. box office grosses. In 1969, Variety started to publish a list of the top 50
grossing films each week. "The Love Bug" was the number one on the
first chart published for the week ending April 16, 1969. The chart was
discontinued in 1990.
In 1976, Marcy Polier, an employee of the Mann
theater chain, set up Centralized Grosses to collate U.S. daily box office data
on a centralized basis rather than each theater chain collating their own
numbers from other theater chains. The company later became National Gross
Service then Entertainment Data, Inc. (EDI).
Except for disclosures by the studios on very
successful films, total domestic (U.S. and Canada) box office gross information
for films was not readily available until National Gross Service started to collate
this data around 1981. The collation of grosses led to wider reporting of
domestic box office grosses for films. Arthur D. Murphy at Variety was one of
the first to organize and chart that information and report it in a meaningful
form. During the 1980s, Daily Variety started to publish a weekly chart of the
domestic box office grosses of films as compared to the Top 50 chart in Variety
which was based on a sample of key markets.
Gradually the focus of a film's performance became
its box office gross rather than the rentals that Variety continued to report
annually. Prior to the tracking of these grosses, domestic or worldwide box
office grosses is not available for many earlier films so the only domestic or
worldwide data available is still often the rental figures.
In 1984, EDI started to report Canadian grosses as
well and by 1985 was reporting data for 15,000 screens. In 1987, EDI set up a
database of box office information which included data on certain films back to
1970. By 1991, all U.S. studios had agreed to share their complete data reports
with EDI. In 1990, EDI opened an office in the UK, moved into Germany in 1993
and Spain in 1995 reporting box office data for those markets.
EDI were acquired by ACNielsen Corporation in 1997 for
$26 million and became Nielsen EDI.
In December 2009, with its acquisition of Nielsen EDI
for $15 million, Measurement Company Rentrak became the sole provider of
worldwide box office ticket sales revenue and attendance information which is
used by many of the websites noted above.
Box office lists
For a list of films which are major box-office hits,
see List of highest-grossing films. Films that are considered to have been very
unsuccessful at the box office are called box office bombs or box office flops.
For a list of these films, see List of box office bombs.
To determine if a movie made a profit, it is not
correct to directly compare the box office gross with the production budget,
because the movie theater keeps nearly half of the gross on average. The split
varies from movie to movie, and the percentage for the distributor is generally
higher in early weeks. Usually the distributor gets a percentage of the revenue
after first deducting a "house allowance" or "house nut".
It is also common that the distributor gets either a percentage of the gross
revenue, or a higher percentage of the revenue after deducting the nut,
whichever is larger. The distributor's share of the box office gross is often
referred to as the "distributor rentals", especially for box office
reporting of older films.
Related terminology
The following is film industry specific terminology
as defined by Box Office Mojo. For films released in North America, box office
figures are usually divided between domestic, meaning the United States and
Canada, and foreign which includes all other countries. Weekly box office
figures are taken to be from Friday through Thursday to allow for the fact that
most films are released on a Friday. A large component of this is the weekend
box office, defined as the box office receipts from Friday through Sunday. In
particular, the weekend box office for the initial week of release, or opening
weekend, is often widely reported. (See List of biggest opening weekends.)
Theaters is the number of theaters in which the movie
is showing. Since a single theater may show a movie on multiple screens, the
total number of screens is used as another measure. The theaters measure is
used to determine whether a film is in wide release, meaning at least 600
theaters, or limited release which is less than 600 theaters. Occasionally, a
film may achieve wide release after an initial limited release; Little Miss
Sunshine is an example of this.
Gross refers to gross earnings. On average, the
movie's distributor receives a little more than half of the final gross (often
referred to as the rentals) with the remainder going to the exhibitor (i.e., Movie
Theater).
Multiple is the ratio of a film's total gross to that
of the opening weekend. A film that earns $20 million on its opening weekend
and finishes with $80 million has a multiple of 4. From 2004 to 2014, films
viewers graded as A+ on Cinema Score had a 4.8 multiple, while films graded as
F had a 2.2 multiple.
References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, WikiBooks, Pinterest,
IMDB, Linked In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, Film Daily, New York
Film Academy, The Balance, Careers Hub, The Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide
Magazine, Blurb, Media Match, Quora, Creative Skill Set, Chron, Investopedia,
Variety, No Film School, WGA, BBC, Daily Variety, The Film Agency, Best Sample
Resume, How Stuff Works, Studio Binder, Career Trend, Producer's Code of
Credits, Truity, Production Hub, Producers Guild of America, Film Connection, Variety,
Wolf Crow, Get In Media, Production Beast, Sony Pictures, Warner Bros, UCAS, Frankenbite,
Realty 101, Careers Hub, Screen Play Scripts, Elements of Cinema, Script
Doctor, ASCAP, Film Independent, Any Possibility, CTLsites, NYFA, Future Learn,
VOM Productions, Mad Studios, Rewire, DP School, Film Reference, DGA, IATSE, ASC,
MPAA, HFPA, MPSE, CDG, AFI, Box Office Mojo, Rotten Tomatoes, Indie Film
Hustle, The Numbers, Netflix, Vimeo, Instagram, Pinterest, Metacritic, Hulu, Reddit,
Locations Hub,
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Box Office / Photo Credit: Movie News Net
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