Patterns among the most profitable movies budgeted $20m to $50m
Last year, I conducted a series of research projects with Bruce Nash of The Numbers, on behalf of the American Film Market. Our findings were received well and so in the true spirit of the film industry, the AFM have commissioned some sequels and spin-offs!
In one of the articles, we took a look at what it takes for a low-budget film to become a breakout hit, and discovered that the most successful movies came from a small number of specific genres. Twelve months on, we thought it would be interesting to take a look at films at the top end of the “independent” budget range and see if these hits also share some of the same DNA.
To do this, we compiled an analysis of the sixty most profitable movies budgeted between $20 million and $50 million, released between 2000 and 2016: roughly four films a year from the period under consideration. For more details of our methods and criteria, see the Notes section at the end of this piece.
What the most profitable movies ($20m to $50m) look like
Last time around, we found all the successful films fell into one of four categories. At this higher budget level, things are a little more diverse, but there are still a relatively small number of models that seem to produce the huge hits.
Let's look a closer look at each of these categories.
Model One: Oscar-worthy dramas
Dramas which have been nominated for either Best Picture or a Best Screenplay award at the Academy Awards.
Including: The Help, Silver Linings Playbook, The Blind Side, Million Dollar Baby, Finding Neverland, About a Boy, True Grit, Ray, American Hustle, Straight Outta Compton and Bridge of Spies.
50% were PG-13, 43% were R-rated and one film was rated PG.
This is the biggest category of films we found, with 14 movies, and the rule here is simple: get a great script, great cast and crew, visionary director, and let them do their thing. Notably, this is the only category that's a holdover from last year's study of low-budget films: at all budget levels, quality pays off.
Model Two: Lowbrow comedies with broad appeal
Comedies with a gross-out component and broad appeal
Including: The Hangover, Ted, The 40 Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up, Bridesmaids, Old School, We're the Millers, Paul Blart: Mall Cop, Ride Along, Zombieland, Mr. Bean's Holiday and 21 Jump Street
75% were R-rated
The general rule among comedies seems to be not to assume too much intellectual capacity from your audience. That's not to say that these films aren't well-written (far from it), but there are precious few jokes about Camus or deep themes in these films. All of these films did well at the box office, but they also played well on video—some of them would have made the top 60 anyway, but cranking out big sales and/or rentals on the home market really helped all of them.
Model Three: High concept thrillers
Thrillers with a clear, one-line hook
Including: Taken, Lucy, Limitless, District 9, Looper and V for Vendetta
Mostly sci-fi with Taken being the only exception
The secret for thrillers seems to be to produce something that has a strong “hook,” and then stick to it. Watching the trailer tells you most of what you need to know about these films, perhaps with a bit of a mystery about how they will end (although the Taken films don't really have much mystery about even that). This is another group of films that benefit from high demand on video.
Model Four: Adaptations of books with an established audience
Based on a highly successful novel, and often produced by a Hollywood major
Including: Twilight, Fifty Shades of Grey, The Notebook, The Maze Runner, Shrek, Hauru no ugoku shiro (Howl's Moving Castle), Bridge to Terabithia and Dear John
Although our focus is mostly on independent films, and studio productions tend to exceed $50 million these days, there are a few cases (eight, to be precise) where a studio has bought the rights to a very popular book, managed to keep their budget below $50 million, and made a tidy profit. The common theme here is that the films mostly pleased the existing fans of the books.
Model Five: High Concept romances
Movies targeted almost exclusively at women
Including: The Devil Wears Prada, The Proposal, Bridget Jones's Diary, Sweet Home Alabama, P.S. I Love You and Serendipity
All but one are PG-13
This category is something of a counterpart to the thrillers. If that list was the top films that a group of guys might rent on a Friday night, this (along with a few of the book adaptations above) might be the top films for a girls' night in. Again, a clear hook, interesting female leads and a strong delivery are key.
Model Six: Age-reversal family films
Family films with either adults acting like children or children acting like adults
Including: Elf, Freaky Friday, The Karate Kid, Spy Kids and The Game Plan
All were PG-rated
We expected to see some family films on this list, but what's striking about it is that the hook in all but one of them is adults acting like kids or vice versa. Kids seem to love that stuff, and these films not only played well in theaters, but are perennial top-sellers on video. It's worth noting that Mamma Mia, another movie in a similar vein, misses this list simply because its reported budget was $52 million. Worldwide, it was the top-selling video released in 2008.
Analysis
The main takeaway from this research is that these types of breakout hits are very clear, high concept movies. They promise the audience one particular thing… and then fully deliver on that pitch. It’s almost like the filmmakers are saying to the audience “We’re not being clever – it’s a film about x”.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, we can see the effect of such simple narratives in the types of people who pay to see these movies. Using UK cinema audience data, we are able to show how the audience differs for four of these major groups.
High Concept Thrillers played to a majority male audience (four-fifths of the audience for Looper were male) and the High Concept Chick Flick played to majority-female audiences (The Devil Wears Prada audience was four-fifths female)
When we focus on Oscar-worthy Dramas and Lowbrow Comedies we can see a clear split, not by gender but by age. All but one of the dramas played to audiences who were, on average, over 25 years old (the one holdout being Silver Linings Playbook). Conversely, all but one of the Lowbrow Comedies played to audiences who were on average under 25 years old, with Bridesmaids being the one exception.
Notes
In order to conduct this study, we began with a list of over 3,000 films from The Numbers’ financial database, investigating full financial details, including North American (i.e. “domestic”) and international box office, video sales and rentals, TV and ancillary revenue. We narrowed our focus to study feature films released between 2000 and 2016 and budgeted between $20 million and $50 million. Finally, we calculated the likely profit margin for the producers, after all revenue and expenses were taken into account.
The financial figures come from a variety of sources, including people directly connected to the films, verified third-party data and computation models based on partial data and industry norms. It is possible that one or two of the individual figures are different to our predictions, though en masse we are confident of the larger picture.
Sequels were excluded as their success could be attributed to their existing audience. This affected Pitch Perfect 2, The Fast and The Furious, Twilight: New Moon and Taken 2.
We had audience data for 77% of the films in our dataset, hence why some movies are missing the final charts.
We counted Mystic River, Flight and Gran Torino in the 'Oscar-worthy Drama' category, despite not receiving Best Picture or Screenplay Oscar nominations, because they fit the other characteristics of this group.
It could also be argued that four of the uncategorized films in our dataset (Walk the Line, Remember the Titans, Oh Brother Where Art Thou and Chicago) were aiming to be Oscar-worthy Dramas, although we erred on the side of caution for the research. If one were to take this generous approach, then that would bring the number of such movies to 18. In other words, 30% of the most profitable films made for between $20 million to $50 million (2000-16) were Oscar-worthy Dramas.