‘Inside Out 2’ is a blockbuster. It doesn’t solve the animation business’ biggest problem
“Inside Out 2” is a bigger box office hit than even Pixar’s staunchest believers had dared to expect, turning down the anxiety dial for fans worried about the Walt Disney Co.-owned computer animation stalwart’s prospects and the state of theatrical box office in general.
The emotion-filled family sequel grossed $100 million from theaters in the U.S. and Canada during its second weekend, representing a mere 35% decline from its gangbusters domestic opening. With $724 million in global ticket sales so far and impressive word-of-mouth, a $1-billion total seems all but assured. Those kinds of numbers go a long way toward burnishing the Pixar brand, which was in need of a confidence boost.
Coming up next for family audiences: more sequels! Universal and Illumination’s “Despicable Me 4” is expected to do huge numbers when it launches during the week of July 4. Disney is betting on “Moana 2” and “Mufasa: The Lion King” (spun off from the “live-action” “Lion King” remake that was entirely computer-generated) to continue its animated momentum.
But the biggest question facing the feature animation business is one that neither “Inside Out 2” nor the Minions — or even Sony’s successful “The Garfield Movie” — can address: What is going on with originals?
While Hollywood thrives on sequels, a robust industry depends on the creation of new franchises. This is especially true for Disney, which relies on new movies to fuel its parks business, toy sales and other facets of its corporate entertainment apparatus. Those new hit properties have been hard to come by lately.
Before “Inside Out 2,” Disney Animation released “Wish,” which failed to impress critics or audiences. Pixar’s “Elemental,” while it eventually found its footing in theaters, posted modest numbers compared with the studio’s prior efforts. DreamWorks Animation’s “Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken” and Disney’s “Strange World” full-on bombed. Disney’s “Encanto,” released in the pandemic-afflicted year of 2021, disappointed in theaters, though it became a viral musical phenomenon when it reached streaming.
“There has been trouble getting new stuff established,” said Tom Sito, an animation professor at USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. “It’s very hard, when you have a brand-new character, to get the audience in 90 minutes. It’s the reason why Disney did so well with fairy tales, because when you hear the word ‘Aladdin’ or ‘The Little Mermaid, you know what you’re getting. When you hear the word ‘Wish’ or ‘Onward,’ you don’t.”
There are multiple theories for why original animated properties have been struggling to generate box office sales.
Disney often is blamed for training audiences to watch its movies at home by sending its pandemic-era Pixar movies “Soul,” “Luca” and “Turning Red” straight to Disney+. Other studios shortened their theatrical windows after using COVID-19 as an opportunity to experiment with different release strategies, meaning moviegoers had more flexibility to wait to see new films online if they wanted.
Economic factors also are at play. Animation is expensive for studios, with Pixar and Disney typically spending $175 million to $200 million to produce a feature film (rivals, including Illumination, Sony and Paramount, spend less). That puts a limit on the companies’ appetite for risk.
And for families, taking kids to the movies can be pricey, and getting everyone in the car on time is a hassle. With those costs and headaches in mind, parents want to be reasonably sure the experience is worth the trouble, and movies with already familiar characters are generally considered a safer bet.
There’s also just so much competition for children’s attention, between social media, YouTube and streaming. Studios have to work harder for new stuff to break through.
It’s more difficult to market these movies now than during the Disney renaissance era, when the Burbank entertainment giant could use every arm of the company, including ABC and the Disney Channel, to make the pitch to kids and parents. Disney still does that, but with linear TV on the decline, it’s a less powerful strategy than it once was.
For those reasons and others, families aren’t always trekking to the theater on opening weekend for an original motion picture, as “Elemental” showed. That movie opened with Pixar’s worst domestic debut since the first “Toy Story” in 1995 but had remarkable staying power, eventually grossing nearly $500 million, suggesting the problem wasn’t the quality of the movie itself. As Ireland-based kids media consultant Emily Horgan has noted, the film also was a hit on streaming.
Universal and Illumination had a weak start with “Migration” over Christmas weekend yet held on to reach almost $300 million (still low, but not as bad as it could have been).
Despite the challenges, studios are still trying to make originals. DreamWorks Animation in September will release “The Wild Robot,” a sci-fi adventure based on a book of the same name, featuring the voice of Lupita Nyong’o. Disney and Pixar will test the originality waters again next year with “Elio,” about a young boy who accidentally becomes Earth’s intergalactic ambassador. But sequels will be there to fill the coffers. In 2026, Disney will release “Toy Story 5” and “Frozen III.”
Pixar executives, in interviews with Bloomberg, have outlined a strategy of releasing three movies every two years, toggling back and forth between originals, sequels and spinoffs.
One hopes that Pixar will continue to be selective when it comes to mining its past hits. “Inside Out 2” worked because it had an inspired premise — what new emotions would come into the mix once Riley hit puberty? It was a simple idea, well executed. And the timing was ideal, with memories of the groundbreaking original still firmly implanted in the emotionally wrecked minds of the folks who saw it in 2015, many of whom now have offspring of their own.
But sequels and spinoffs have their own risks, as Pixar’s “Toy Story” offshoot “Lightyear” demonstrated when it cratered in 2022. Young people, even kids, can smell an ill-conceived franchise extension a mile away.
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