Yes, but when a studio thats already bought Lucasfilms, Marvel, and now Fox, its not like people are going to be happy about the prospect of business for other companies, hence the "monopoly" label. I mean when you own over 60% of the box office (if not more) and only 10 years ago before purchasing these companies you owned 25%, its going to scare people as the trend for other companies certainly does not look good as competition against Disney becomes even more difficult.Yup! That's the other thing people seem to forget. Fox wasn't some small, independent studio that was forced into being sold. They WANTED someone to buy them. It is what it is.
and thus Disney dominates the buying and domination of screen time, effectively blocking the other studios out of decent access during those times.Yes, but when a studio thats already bought Lucasfilms, Marvel, and now Fox, its not like people are going to be happy about the prospect of business for other companies, hence the "monopoly" label. I mean when you own over 60% of the box office (if not more) and only 10 years ago before purchasing these companies you owned 25%, its going to scare people as the trend for other companies certainly does not look good as competition against Disney becomes even more difficult.
They don't own 60% of the box office. The control to Box Office big time, yes, but according to Box Office Mojo, Disney has 37.1% of the market share right now + Fox's 3.7%. So the own slightly over 40%. Yes, that's still a HUGE chunk, but 60% is literally 33% more than they actually have.Yes, but when a studio thats already bought Lucasfilms, Marvel, and now Fox, its not like people are going to be happy about the prospect of business for other companies, hence the "monopoly" label. I mean when you own over 60% of the box office (if not more) and only 10 years ago before purchasing these companies you owned 25%, its going to scare people as the trend for other companies certainly does not look good as competition against Disney becomes even more difficult.
Article I read must’ve been inaccurate. Showed Fox and Lucas alone (obviously not this year) add up to basically that 33% you’re talking about. At least in 2017/2018. Either way, not a good trend for healthy market/competition.They don't own 60% of the box office. The control to Box Office big time, yes, but according to Box Office Mojo, Disney has 37.1% of the market share right now + Fox's 3.7%. So the own slightly over 40%. Yes, that's still a HUGE chunk, but 60% is literally 33% more than they actually have.
It probably did. Fox is having an extremely poor year this year. With Ad Astra and Ford v. Ferrari coming up though, things might be looking up.Article I read must’ve been inaccurate. Showed Fox and Lucas alone (obviously not this year) add up to basically that 33% you’re talking about. At least in 2017/2018. Either way, not a good trend for healthy market/competition.
Disney needs Spidey more than Spidey needs Disney. Sony is being very shrewd imo and I like that they have the balls to stand up to Disney the more I think about it.
Even if we are to go by this thought process that Disney doesn’t need him until the next Avengers, if Disney let’s him go, Sony will make Spidey movies with Holland on their own and it will completely ruin the canon.One thing to consider, theres not an Avengers movie currently on the released slate. Probably not going to be one till 2022 at the earliest. They don't "need" Spidey till then. So Disney has time to play hardball. They can write it so that he can be added late in the game. While Sony, if they are going to release a Spidey movie in 2022, needs to have scripts moving that will drastically change depending on who is calling the shots. So they are in a spot where a decision needs to be made soon. It does give Disney a little more leverage.
Even if we are to go by this thought process that Disney doesn’t need him until the next Avengers, if Disney let’s him go, Sony will make Spidey movies with Holland on their own and it will completely ruin the canon.
They need him to protect the entire MCU.
It’s certainly a Market Leader and getting closer to a near-monopoly every day lol. The acquisitions of Lucas, Marvel, and Fox is kinda scary tbh. People are exaggerating when they say “monopoly”, obviously, but the sheer volume of media they own/sell/make a crap ton of money off of is disconcerting.
Disney, Apple, Amazon, Google, Facebook, etc. None are true monopolies, but calling them something close isn’t too much of a stretch imo
Disney was willing to put up 50% of the cost to make the movies. In return they wanted 30% of the profit, the addition to add the remaining SpiderVerse characters to the MCU, full creative control, 100% merchandise (which they already have) and choice of producers (They made it clear the current producers would not be available).There's been an update to the story.
'Spider-Man' Standoff: Why Sony Thinks It Doesn't Need "Kevin's Playbook" Anymore | Hollywood Reporter
According to this, Disney didn't ask for 50/50, they asked for 30. That's still quite a bit but not nearly as outlandish as 50.
Also, the guy that originally broke the news of all of this has a history of working with Sony... sooooo that seems suspicious. If that's true, then Sony was definitely the studio that "leaked" the info hoping to put pressure on Disney. Except that backfired because most people seem to be upset with Sony.
I still think both studios are being babies and need to just hug and make-up.
I think the bigger thing was: What did Sony gain from that deal? Nothing.Disney was willing to put up 50% of the cost to make the movies. In return they wanted 30% of the profit, the addition to add the remaining SpiderVerse characters to the MCU, full creative control, 100% merchandise (which they already have) and choice of producers (They made it clear the current producers would not be available).
Money was one deal-breaker but adding people like Venon, Green Goblin etc to Disney's control was also a big stop light
Possibly, but that conversation is happening over in the dedicated thread for the DCA ride.Does this in any way cause issue for the parks? More specifically the new Disney Spidey attractions.