The 2023 movie box office will need a strong second half after an inconsistent first six months

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LOS ANGELES — The 2023 box office is inching closer to pre-pandemic levels, but inconsistent performances from blockbuster features in the first six months of the year will put a lot of pressure on second-half releases.
While the domestic box office has tallied $4.46 billion in ticket sales through June 30, a nearly 20% increase over the same period in 2022, it still lags behind 2019, the benchmark of a time before the pandemic, according to data from Comscore.
Ticket sales are down 21% from four years ago, but that's not the only thing that's down. So, too, is the number of wide releases.
From January to June 30 in 2019, 57 films were released in 2,000 theaters or more. In 2023, there have been only 45 releases during that same period.
"It really isn't a fair comparison just going dollars to dollars," said Mike Polydoros, CEO at PaperAirplane Media.
And quantity matters. While blockbusters and franchise films can draw big crowds, a steady stream of low- to mid-tier budget movies is also critical to the overall success of the industry. Diversity of content is also key, with audiences clamoring for a wider array of genre films, from horror and drama to romance and comedy.
The more opportunities audiences have to head to cinemas, the better, industry experts told CNBC.
Hit and miss
Warner Bros.' "Shazam! Fury of the Gods" and "The Flash" dramatically underperformed, as did Disney's "Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania" and "Elemental."
Meanwhile, Universal's "Super Mario Bros. Movie," Disney's "Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol. 3" and Sony's "Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse" have managed to capture audience attention, alongside a slew of horror movie titles including Paramount's "Scream VI" and Universal's "M3gan."
Still from Sony's "Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse."
Sony
"Even though a few releases haven't lived up to bullish expectations on their own individual terms, 2023's box office to date is generally about as healthy as could be expected," said Shawn Robbins, chief analyst at BoxOffice.com.
Robbins said the main takeaways from the first half of the year are that comic book and nostalgia-driven films are "not the novelties they once were." While older millennial audiences have been the driving force behind much of the last two years in box office recovery, studios would do well to begin catering to younger generations going forward, he said.
"Moviegoers are going to be more selective with the content they choose to spend money on, especially as the broader economy and stagnant wage growth continue to be an issue for most average Americans," Robbins said.
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