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posted by janrinok on Thursday May 03 2018, @12:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the picking-a-winner dept.

Avengers: Infinity War Sets Box Office Debut Records

A Disney film has unseated another Disney film:

Disney and Marvel's Avengers: Infinity War kicked off the summer box office in high style over the weekend, opening to a record-setting $250 million in North America and $380 million overseas for a global total of $630 million, the top worldwide debut of all time. The superhero mashup accomplished the feat without China, where it doesn't unfurl until May 11.

Fellow Disney title Star Wars: The Force Awakens ($248 million) was the previous record holder for biggest domestic bow, while Universal's The Fate of the Furious had held the record for biggest global start ($541.9 million).

Infinity War's box-office victory was aided by the biggest Saturday of all time in North America ($83 million), as well as the biggest Sunday (an estimated $61 million), reflecting powerful word of mouth. The tentpole cost close to $300 million to produce before a major marketing spend.

$250 million is a studio estimate, which may change. Star Wars: The Force Awakens is said to have earned $256,008,273 in the U.S. and Canada after being adjusted for inflation.

Could AI Predict the Next Avengers: Infinity War?

Meanwhile, an Anonymous Coward asks:

Some movies are obvious hits. Like, for example, Avengers: Infinity War, which made a record-breaking $258 million at the domestic box office last weekend, filling seats and the pockets of Marvel Studios parent company Disney. But not every summer—or spring, or fall—blockbuster has the benefit of 10 years and 18 movies of built-up audience goodwill. So while the Mouse House knew they had a potentially earth-shattering hit on their hands well before opening night, other studios trying to catch up have no way of predicting whether their latest attempts to hit big will do so.

Actually, they might. Machine learning is everywhere, and artificial intelligence is no longer just a Spielberg-Kubrick collaboration. These days, Amazon can practically anticipate when you might need toilet paper and Netflix can predict your next binge, so it only seems natural that Hollywood will start using AI to predict the next big blockbuster, or at least improve its chances of becoming one. In fact, several companies are already working on algorithmic ways to predict box office results. Whether or not algorithms are better at picking winners than studio execs, however, is another matter—one that's still far from resolved.

Source: https://www.wired.com/story/artificial-intelligence-box-office-predictions/


Original Submission #1Original Submission #2

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 03 2018, @03:35AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 03 2018, @03:35AM (#674918)

    The comic book origins do though. They're proper nerdy dorky

    FTFY.
    Most nerds are introverted, going into a comics shop with a shopper density of a supermarket isn't a prospect to enjoy anymore.