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
IMG_3609.webp
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 am enjoying the shitposting on /tv/

It was a bad title, it wasn't marketed well, it had no elevator pitch or curbside appeal, it's Cal Arts garbage and they spent too much retooling the protagonist from a black boy with a gay haircut into a lighter Latino autist with a missing eye for no good reason. It was obviously supposed to come out under Kamala's reign.

$300 million+ just to sell Glorp Drank in parks with a Silly straw for 10 bucks a pop
 
Fuck you Coco is a great family movie. If you cant appreciate a story with the lesson of follow your dreams but dont forget your family you stink. In an age where most kids movies are pozzed shit i found it quite wholesome.
Did you notice how...
The square-jawed goy-coded singer guy murdered his Jewish-looking friend and stole his songs to become famous? Classic reality inversion propaganda.
 
You don't even need to see beyond one screenshot. Brown disabled kid floating on a leaf with a ghost thingy? Nope. I'll watch Princess Mononoke for a thousandth time instead. And btw just one still from that film sells it - the girl with the mask next to a giant white wolf. Hell yeah I want to see what that's about.

I've checked out long long ago, though on occasion I am pleasantly surprised by things such as Wall-e.
 
Even Don Bluth's less than good films still had great animation. It's sad how far it's fallen.
Once Upon A December was a beautiful song and beautifully animated. I have vague memories of All Dogs Go To Heaven and watching it at a friend's house but that was nicely animated too.
 
Once Upon A December was a beautiful song and beautifully animated. I have vague memories of All Dogs Go To Heaven and watching it at a friend's house but that was nicely animated too.

All of his early work in the 80s up to Anastasia was brilliant. His work after and in between Anastasia was pretty lame, but it was still well drawn.

It's too bad the animators (or the studio people) would rather save money by creating subpar and unoriginal style art. They all look the same.

Look back at the older animators. They all have their own unique styles where you can take one look at it and know who made it.

When's the last time we had that with a Disney or Pixar film?
 
All of his early work in the 80s up to Anastasia was brilliant. His work after and in between Anastasia was pretty lame, but it was still well drawn.
Check your timeline--it's generally agree that the last good film was All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989), then it was Rock-a-Doodle (1991), Thumbelina (1994), A Troll in Central Park (1994), and The Pebble and the Penguin (1995), all of which were various degrees of suck. Then there was Anastasia which was alright (as an adult I recognized and appreciated the VAs which I never knew as a kid--Meg Ryan and John Cusack are basically in another romcom, but there was Kelsey Grammer, Christopher Lloyd, and Hank Azaria too). Then after Anastasia there was Titan AE which famously did terribly in theaters and ended Don Bluth's theatrical career. Looking back it was a disappointment where they didn't seem to know what kind of movie they really wanted to make.
 
All of his early work in the 80s up to Anastasia was brilliant. His work after and in between Anastasia was pretty lame, but it was still well drawn.

It's too bad the animators (or the studio people) would rather save money by creating subpar and unoriginal style art. They all look the same.

Look back at the older animators. They all have their own unique styles where you can take one look at it and know who made it.

When's the last time we had that with a Disney or Pixar film?
The Secret of NIMH is fucking timeless.
 
Bonus Funko abomination. Oh boy, who wouldn't want that thing on their bookshelf?
elio-pop-buddy-animation-vinyl-figure-elio-w-buddy-9-cm.webp
Yet further proof that Disney doesn't know what the fuck to do with their money. Not too long ago, they had to dump ~$300M worth of Disney licensed Funko Pops into landfills as a tax write off. Maybe if they're wasn't a financial incentive to throw literal tons of unsold product away, Disney'd get the hint. Who am I kidding? They lost something like a billion dollars in theaters last year. Money means nothing to them.
 
Screenwriters Brian C. Brown and Elliott DiGuiseppi initially pitched the story of a family of sea monsters living on land in plain sight to Chris Kuser, a development executive at DreamWorks Animation. Titled Meet the Gillmans, the script drew from their shared memories of growing up in Oviedo, Florida as well as Brown’s personal experiences as a first generation Cuban American, The Gillman family are loosely based on Brown’s real life family.

...OK, but y'know what?

I feel like you could do something like that and it could be funny and charming. 'Meet The Gillmans' seems like quite a '90s movie premise, if that makes any sense. Shades of The Addams Family, Men in Black, maybe a bit of Meet The Applegates, but animated and for family audiences.

I can picture this little family of these sort of ugly-cute, Hangyodon-looking, slightly murloc-esque, Innsmouth fish-people with big bulgy eyes, who are all about two foot shorter than all the human characters around them, trying in vain to appear normal and blend in. Maybe a running joke about anything weird they do being brushed off by the humans with, "Well, y'know, they are Cuban."

What was the artstyle they went with, though...

1000023884.webp

...Oh.

Y'know what the big problem is with animation these days? Everything is so fucking boring.
 
I am enjoying the shitposting on /tv/

It was a bad title, it wasn't marketed well, it had no elevator pitch or curbside appeal, it's Cal Arts garbage and they spent too much retooling the protagonist from a black boy with a gay haircut into a lighter Latino autist with a missing eye for no good reason. It was obviously supposed to come out under Kamala's reign.

$300 million+ just to sell Glorp Drank in parks with a Silly straw for 10 bucks a pop
Here is the thing:

Niggers are ugly. Even as children they aren't cute. As protagonists they have very, very little appeal to white Audiences, spic audiences, asians, anything, because its hard for those audiences to look at Elio and go "that could be me!"

You can make Elio look like a spic and he might pass for italian or olive skinned, something a white kid could project onto. Maybe asians might say, "okay he could be filipino i guess."

They are the most versatile of mud people for globohomo.
 
Even Don Bluth's less than good films still had great animation. It's sad how far it's fallen.
It makes me miss great animation like Henry Selick, Don Bluth, or hell, Tim Burton, or Tex Avery or even Ralph Bakshi.

It sucks that these recent animators will now be included with the actual good ones.

I don't care how much A Troll in Central Park bombed commercially and critically, my sister and I wore that fucking VHS out growing up. Even the worst Don Bluth movie stands head over shoulders of the shit we get together. I will drop this banger whenever it's tangiently related.


Have to use this as a chance to shill one of my favorites, Milt Kahl. He's the man behind the films that built the legacy of Disney, including Sleeping Beauty, Pinocchio, Snow White, 101 Dalmatians, Song of the South, The Sword in the Stone, Robin Hood, The Jungle Book, and many others. One of his noticable trademarks is the head waggle that characters do during conversation. At the time, it was already a struggle for most to properly animate mouth movement, so naturally Milt Kahl would take it a step further and add smooth head movement and facial expression to the mix.

 
Last edited:
Back