"Barbenheimer" makes waves for July's movie spending, but box office
recovery still lags
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[September 01, 2023]
By Amina Niasse
NEW YORK (Reuters) - "Barbenheimer" - the twin-bill summer box office
phenom - sure helped to drive U.S. consumers back to cinemas last month,
but movie-going is still struggling to catch up to other recreational
spending categories post-pandemic.
Outlays for movie theater-going grew in July at an annualized rate of
nearly 11% from June, outshining the spending gains last month at
sporting events and concerts or live theater, data out Thursday from the
Commerce Department showed. Total consumer spending increased a
stronger-than-expected 0.8% last month.
The release of Warner Bros.' "Barbie" and Universal's "Oppenheimer,"
marketed as an unlikely double feature, spurred ticket sales and they
continue to defy what is typically an end-of-summer slump. While that
helped long-suffering box office receipts, it made less of a splash for
overall consumer spending when compared to larger categories like
clothing and household furnishings, economists at Oxford Economics said.
"'Barbenheimer' appears to have had only a limited direct impact on
spending last month, with the outsize $700 million annualized, or 11%,
increase in real spending at movie theaters only a small part of July's
gain," said Michael Pearce, lead U.S. economist.
It made a big difference in the live-event spending area though, at
least for the moment.
Movie theater outlays in July came in at an annualized rate of about $10
billion, up from around $9 billion in June, and were the key driver
behind live-event spending growth on the month of 1.9%. This summer’s
box office has been out of the ordinary with ticket sales for the season
up $500 million from last summer’s sales, according to data firm Box
Office Mojo.
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A man operates a video camera at the
world premiere of the film "Barbie" in Los Angeles, California,
U.S., July 9, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
How long that momentum lasts is
uncertain amid ongoing strikes by actors and writers that have
clouded the outlook for the new release pipeline.
While other categories of live-event spending have fully recovered
from the hit delivered by pandemic shutdowns, film attendance
outlays remain at roughly 65% of their pre-COVID levels.
Sporting events were the first to rebound, and live performance
admissions came through after that, with concertgoers - many
spending about $1,300 per show on Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour - making
an impact.
That tour is projected to generate $5 billion in economic growth for
the U.S. economy according to market research firm QuestionPro. The
tour prompted attention from the Federal Reserve Bank of
Philadelphia, which said Swifties, as Swift's fans dub themselves,
drove up hotel revenue in the city.
Beyonce's "BeyHive" is also shelling out big bucks for tickets to
her Renaissance Tour. The tour garnered $295 million through her
Aug. 1 show at Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts, according to
Billboard Boxscore.
(Reporting by Amina Niasse; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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