Disaster With ‘Elio,’ Pixar Has Its Worst Box Office Opening Ever - Look upon my works, ye mighty, and despair.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/22/business/elio-pixar-box-office.html
https://archive.is/b4xRs
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The original space adventure sold about $21 million in tickets at domestic theaters from Thursday night through Sunday, putting new pressure on the once-unstoppable studio.

Pixar knew that “Elio,” an original space adventure, would most likely struggle in its first weekend at the box office.

Animated movies based on original stories have become harder sells in theaters, even for the once-unstoppable Pixar. At a time when streaming services have proliferated and the broader economy is unsettled, families want assurance that spending the money for tickets will be worth it.
But the turnout for “Elio” was worse — much worse — than even Pixar had expected. The film, which cost at least $250 million to make and market, collected an estimated $21 million from Thursday evening through Sunday at theaters in the United States and Canada, according to Comscore, which compiles box office data.

It was Pixar’s worst opening-weekend result ever. The previous bottom was “Elemental,” which arrived to $30 million in 2023.

A month ago, when the “Elio” marketing campaign began to hit high gear, Pixar and its corporate owner, Disney, had hoped that “Elio” would, in the worst-case scenario, match the “Elemental” number. Instead, it fell 30 percent short.

In wide release overseas, “Elio” collected an additional $14 million, on a par with the initial international results for “Elemental.”
Quality did not appear to be a factor: Reviews for “Elio” were mostly positive, and ticket buyers gave the movie an A grade in CinemaScore exit polls. The Rotten Tomatoes audience score stood at 91 percent positive on Sunday.

Pixar has also recovered from a period during the coronavirus pandemic when Disney weakened the animation studio’s brand by using its films to build the Disney+ streaming service, bypassing theaters altogether. Last year, Pixar’s “Inside Out 2” was the No. 1 movie at the global box office. It sold $1.7 billion in tickets.

But original animated ideas have fallen out of favor at the box office, analysts said. Pixar is not alone. DreamWorks Animation’s “Ruby Gillman: Teenage Kraken” flatlined in 2023 with $5.5 million in opening-weekend sales. Illumination Animation’s “Migration” arrived to $12 million that year.

The problem for Pixar is that its originals remain wildly expensive. “Ruby Gillman” and “Migration” each cost 50 percent less than “Elio” did. (Pixar movies are still produced entirely in the United States, increasing labor costs. Some other studios have started to rely on overseas production.)
On Sunday, Disney said it hoped a broader audience would find “Elio” over the coming weeks. The company pointed to “Elemental,” which overcame weak initial sales to ultimately collect nearly $500 million worldwide.

Families have had a lot of theatrical options of late. Universal’s live-action “How to Train Your Dragon” remake, for instance, repeated as the No. 1 movie in North America over the weekend, with $37 million in ticket sales.

Second place went to the auteur horror sequel “28 Years Later” (Sony Pictures), which debuted to about $30 million. David A. Gross, a film consultant who publishes a newsletter on box office numbers, called that total “excellent.” Directed by Danny Boyle, “28 Years Later” cost about $60 million, not including marketing.

“Elio” was third.

Brooks Barnes covers all things Hollywood. He joined The Times in 2007 and previously worked at The Wall Street Journal.
 
I don't know anything about this movie but maybe ruining your brand by making every movie about gay niggers was a bad idea

honestly I'd go see a gay nigger cartoon if it was traditional animation

like you can have good animation of gay niggers OR you can have cgi crap about wholesome chuds and people will go see it but you can't have crap about gay niggers, this isn't hard
 
I saw it this weekend. I thought it was good, better than I expected. Its no "Up" but it's miles better than a lot of the slip Disney and/or Pixar has been churning out the last several years. A million times better than the kabillion dollar earning Lilo & Stitch shitheap.

Of course all the YouTubers are saying it's "the worst ever" somehow.
 
I'm glad I grew up before the 2d Disney era ended
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I always find it fascinating how Atlantis is such a mid movie, watched it not long ago and everything goes by so fast since its runtime is way shorter than movies today, there isn't much depth to the story and characters but that artstyle, the artstyle is so great I can remember many key scenes and the vehicles they used since the day I watched in theaters as a kid.

It wasn't a box office hit but it keeps a cult status. I don't think any of the Pixar movies past Coco will be remembered like this.
They really have to let go of the Calarts style, invest more into the look of the film, just making a "Pixar movie" won't cut it and I did get enough ads for Elio that just made the movie look boring to me and my nephews/nieces, hell when not even the children in my family wanna watch it you know something is wrong. I don't really care that it has a good Rotten tomatoes score I'll catch it in streaming.
 
I always find it fascinating how Atlantis is such a mid movie, watched it not long ago and everything goes by so fast since its runtime is way shorter than movies today, there isn't much depth to the story and characters but that artstyle, the artstyle is so great I can remember many key scenes and the vehicles they used since the day I watched in theaters as a kid.
It's also from the era of killer dialogue.... the practitioners of which have long since died off, sadly.

"You promised me a percentage!"

"Next time? Get it in writing!"
 
Luca, beanmouths;
And homosexual allegory.

Turning Red, chink beanmouths and menstruation (?)
And child pornography: the protagonist turns into a red panda, which is established in the movie as a stand-in for pubertal changes, so her schoolmate can take photos with her for money.
 
It's crazy that animators in the 80s and 90s had to basically draw everything by hand but the characters still looked more realistic, detailed and attractive than characters from animators today who have all kinds of assistance.

I used to joke with people about Richard Williams and The Thief and the Cobbler. If you've ever wondered how someone could work on something for a quarter of their life and not finish it, consider the fact the madman animated every single individual card in a deck for a sequence that lasts roughly 10 seconds.

He achieved his fluidity by animating by 1s, meaning having a drawing for every frame of animation, resulting in 24 drawings per second of animation. In other words, he drew 240 individual shots to animate 10 seconds.



R.I.P. Vincent Price. You were THE voice of horror.

 
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No, that was Elián González.
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This is a surprisingly accurate comparison 'cause the whole plot of Elio is pretty much about an evil space dictator of a war planet ostracized by the space UN trying to negotiate for a small child (his son) back (Elio kidnapped his son as a bargaining chip).

I like how the movie depicted all the space UN delegates/diplomats are ineffectual, snooty cowardly dipshits who sit around all day drinking space mimosas. Like, the whole lesson of the movie is: remember kids, diplomacy is mostly useless!
 
Pixar knew that “Elio,” an original space adventure, would most likely struggle in its first weekend at the box office.

Animated movies based on original stories have become harder sells in theaters, even for the once-unstoppable Pixar.
I can’t take the constant rehashing of this “animated originals don’t sell” cop-out as if we’re dealing with some major mystery here- as if being animated or not has anything to do with this and we don’t live in a world where people go watch new movies pretty frequently and anime (and a Chinese animated film, notably this year- at least outside the US) is eating Pixar’s lunch routinely.

If you wanted to be very charitable you could make an argument that it’s a bigger effort and money investment when you’re bringing your kids to the theater, but in reality you wouldn’t have any of these problems if people had faith in the story actually being GOOD. Pixar has a worsening crisis of brand confidence because their recent track record shows that they just don’t reliably make good movies anymore, and so people wait for word of mouth to make the call.

If you want someone to be excited for the thing you’re putting out, you have to demonstrate that YOU’RE excited about it. The complete lack of marketing, especially marketing that actually tries to communicate what the film is about, shows a lack of confidence in the product that audiences pick up on- why would we give a shit if you don’t seem to feel strongly about us knowing this exists? And hey- maybe the team who made it do feel confident about it and want to shout it from the rooftops, but if they do, the studio sure isn’t projecting that to audiences.

The way the media approaches this issue is so purposefully obtuse as to be intelligence-insulting. It drives me insane as a creative. It’s like watching a baby try again and again to slam the square toy in the round hole in a peg box toy.
 
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Another story about some quirky retard who's actually very very special. Slop.

Remember when Pixar used to tell stories like Toy Story where the main character thought he was the best then had to be brought back down to earth by having his ego obliterated when he was replaced, only to then realize that even if he's not the greatest anymore he still has a place and that's alright? Now that's a real story. Showing kids that you can be both great at something and not superduper special all at once. That's just one lesson and there's like 3 more on top of it.
 
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