Nearly 10 months later, a tougher reality is unfolding: People have stopped buying tickets to family films. In a striking development, the great all-ages unifier of American pop-culture is struggling.
Like so much else the pandemic has upended — the five-day office workweek, the sardined-in dance floor — it remains unclear if the shift is momentary or permanent. For now, though, studios have begun frantically pulling family films from the release calendar, or selling them to streamers, or both.
If the trend continues, a cherished institution — (What, after all, feels more American than a family outing to the multiplex?) — could be diminished, and some sizable revenue disappear along with it.
“The really big event family film like ‘Frozen’ I don’t think will ultimately go anywhere,” said Doug Creutz, an analyst at investment firm Cowen, echoing the thoughts of several Hollywood observers. “But for a lot of other titles, even after the pandemic ends, the idea of going to see a family film may not be what it was.”
While parents will still bring their children out for major theatrical events, the idea of a weekly or even monthly family trip to the movies could go the way of the beloved but long-forgotten Banana Splits.
The immediate culprit is the delta variant, which, by infecting children at greater rates, appears to have prompted cautious parents to keep their unvaccinated children home.
But more long-term factors are also at play. In 2019, a study from the Motion Picture Association found the number of regular monthly moviegoers under the age of 12 dropped 16 percent from 2018, the only double-digit percentage decline of any age group below the age of 50. Eighteen months of at-home viewing have only made kids — and parents — less likely to think of theaters when they think of entertainment.
Financially, meanwhile, global box office economics have increasingly been convincing theatrical film executives that it’s only worthwhile to aim for big-budget home runs.
Collectively, it means a whole tier of mid-budget family movies could either go to streaming or soon vanish entirely.
“The number of theatrical slots for animation was actually being reduced even before the pandemic,” said Dan Sarto, the co-founder of the online animation community Animation World Network. “Now it’s just being accelerated.”
Potentially gone from theaters are animated family movies that cost less than $100 million to produce. In 2019, there were at least five such films. All grossed between $100 million and $200 million worldwide, which likely puts them slightly in the black but doesn’t make them sufficiently profitable to justify their existence in a shrinking market.
This is perhaps even truer for live-action family movies. Twenty years ago, live-action family films were a regular event in movie theaters. In 2001, four of the top 20 movies at the domestic box office were live-action family films (“Spy Kids,” “The Princess Diaries,” the first “Harry Potter” and a “Dr. Dolittle” sequel). In 2019, the list included only an “Aladdin” reboot.
Streaming has especially picked up the slack here. The Jennifer Garner comedy “Yes Day” and Robert Rodriguez’s kid-superhero follow-up “We Can Be Heroes” were two of the biggest lockdown hits, live-action family films that drew tens of millions of viewers apiece on Netflix, according to the company.
“We knew ‘Yes Day’ would find the largest possible audience on a streamer,” said Daniel Rappaport, a partner at Management 360 who produced “Yes Day,” explaining the logic of setting up the project there. “With theaters, it’s a crapshoot how many people will come out to see it. On Netflix, it was viewed by over 65 million households.”
The family film — that gloriously welcome notion that parents could pack the kids into the car for something everyone would enjoy, or at least tolerate — has a rich legacy.
It began in earnest with Disney hits like “Mary Poppins” and “Peter Pan” in the mid-20th century and stayed popular for decades with films like “The Muppet Movie” (1979), “Annie” (1982), “Flight of the Navigator” (1986), “Honey, I Shrunk The Kids” (1989) and “Mrs. Doubtfire” (1993). They gave way to the animation boom of recent years (pretty much every Pixar movie, e.g.).
The category came with both economic imperative and cultural benefit. On a landscape where generations can’t find common ground, the family film allowed older and younger Americans to come together — a grand bridge-builder in one profitable, 100-minute multiplex package.
The present reality, though, is less uplifting. Encapsulating the tenuous moment is “Hotel Transylvania.” The Sony animated franchise had seen its global box office totals go up with every new movie since its 2012 debut; the most recent film took in more than a half-billion dollars in 2018. But Sony is poised to sell the fourth movie, “Hotel Transylvania: Transformania” to Amazon for a figure reported to be a little above $100 million. The studio’s acceptance of that sum suggests just how much executives think box office could fall off compared to past films.
Paramount is also facing the doldrums. Executives on the studio’s east Los Angeles lot had high hopes for “Clifford the Big Red Dog,” an adaptation of the classic book series scheduled for theatrical release in September. But watching the family-film highway pileup executives decided to pull it from the calendar indefinitely. The movie’s Canadian distributor also canceled a gala at the Toronto International Film Festival, which starts Thursday. Universal, meanwhile, postponed “Minions: The Rise of Gru” for a year, to July 2022.
That movie, like “Lightyear,” Pixar’s “Toy Story” spinoff scheduled for next June, will probably fare well once covid ends, Creutz and other experts note. These big-budget titles generate hundreds of millions of dollars in profits, and neither studios nor audiences are in a rush to give them up. But the outlook for everything else is less clear as theatrical studios re-examine a potentially smaller market post-covid.
Theater owners say they have never seen so stark a divide in family entertainment between the high-end and everything else.
“It just has to feel premium now,” said William Barstow, chief executive of the Main Street Theatres chain based in Omaha “You can’t just throw out a flat cartoon anymore. Families are too smart. And they have too much else to watch.”
Studios trying to skimp on animation or marketing costs with their family films the way that they might, say, a horror movie, will see their film run out of theaters, he said. “As a studio you have to get behind it in a way you never did before,” Barstow added.
If the theatrical experience does start to fade, streaming would seem to be an apt replacement. But it’s not clear the experience can simply be ported over.
“There’s a marketing campaign that these films have and an excitement that’s created when a movie is in theaters first,” said Alicia Reese, an analyst at Wedbush Securities. “That makes it feel like something special. Will that happen in the same way with family films that premiere on streaming? I don’t know.”
Several observers noted that Peter Docter’s Pixar movie “Soul,” which premiered on Disney Plus in December, seems to have had less durability than other films from the same studio and director, such as “Up” and “Inside Out.”
Creators are also trying to tally the social cost. By scaling these movies down to the small screen, they ask, will it also reduce the films’ place in our collective memory?
“I go back and forth — is this a tragedy or is it just a change?” said a producer of numerous theatrical family-film blockbusters, asking for anonymity so as not to be seen criticizing partners.
Some also worry that the move to streaming, while it opens up the possibility for more content, will actually lead to a new kind of creative conservatism. The Disney Plus lineup is a case in point. It includes projects such as “The Mighty Ducks,” “Home Alone,” “Sister Act” and “Turner and Hooch” — all reboots of film hits from the late 1980′s and early 1990′s.
“I call it the ‘now what’ moment, when every family property in existence has been worn out,” said Fred Seibert, producer of such hits as “The Fairly OddParents” and “Adventure Time” who as an executive also steered a struggling Nickelodeon to popularity. “I don’t think we’re at the ‘now what’ moment yet, but we may not be far away. And when we do I worry not only how we will make anything new but how we’ll be able to communicate it to the audience.”
Television has picked up the baton from the film world in at least one way. Family films in theaters have long inspired “co-viewing” — parents and children watching together. After all, kid-oriented films in theaters need to appeal to the adults who ferried them there.
But after nearly 18 lockdown months, there is evidence more co-viewing is happening at-home too, and producers are now crafting their entertainment accordingly. Seibert notes that a “Fairly OddParents” reboot he is producing at Paramount Plus will include live-action in addition to animation, which could attract an older audience.
Bruce Nash, who runs box office site The Numbers, says he sees the family film’s migration out of theaters as a temporary condition; the movies and audience will come back when it’s safe, likely in 2022.
But even he admits the economics may diminish the breadth of titles.
“If we get all the way back to 75 percent of the pre-covid audience — and I think that’s an optimistic number — studios are still going to have to find a way to cut budgets by 25 percent. If they don’t,” he said, “the movies don’t get made.”
But the biggest obstacle facing theatrical family films, experts say, may be that the adults who fuel their success will simply lose interest after this extended streaming period.
“The longer people do something temporary,” said Creutz, “the greater the chance it becomes permanent.”
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