Disney's 'Jungle Cruise' Sinks At Chinese Box Office: What Went Wrong
The Walt Disney Co.ās (NYSE: DIS) āJungle Cruiseā had its belated Chinese premiere more than three months after its U.S. opening and promptly sank at the box office with a dismal $3.3 million in ticket sales.
What Happened: āJungle Cruise,ā an action/adventure film starring Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt, opened in the U.S. on July 30 in both a theatrical and Disney+ streaming release. To date, it has been the last Disney film to reach audiences in a dual presentation. To date, the film has grossed $215 million globally.
But according to Hollywood Reporter coverage, āJungle Cruiseā was overwhelmed at the Chinese box office by two locally produced films that premiered over the weekend ā the mystery āBe Someday,ā with a $20 million gross, and the biopic āAnitaā about singer-actress Anita Mui ,with a $6.3 million gross.
The epic āThe Battle of Lake Changjinā has shown continued success. It took in $4.8 million at the box office and has grossed a record-breaking $882 million to date.
Besides the preference by Chinese audiences for local fare, the Hollywood Reporter also acknowledged ārampant piracyā along with a ālimited marketing effort from Disneyā as further damaging the release of āJungle Cruise.ā
Also, Chinaās government limits the quantity of international films allowed into the country. According to a Deadline report, āJungle Cruiseā reached China within a batch of Hollywood productions that included āDune,ā āNo Time to Die,ā āSnake Eyes: G.I. Joe Originsā and āVivo.ā The latter is an animated feature from Sony Pictures (NYSE: SONY) that bypassed U.S. theaters this summer and went straight to streaming via Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX).
Related Link: Disney's 'Eternals' Outpaces 'Clifford The Big Red Dog' At Weekend Box Office
Why It Matters: Despite the poor commercial returns, āJungle Cruiseā is something of a victory for Disney, which has seen several of its films blocked by Chinese government officials.
While no official reason has been given for not allowing āShang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Ringsā and āEternalsā into the Chinese marketing, it is widely believed that the Chinese censors were reacting to negative comments about the nationās Communist government by āShang-Chiā star Simu Liu and āEternalsā director ChloĆ© Zhao, both of whom were born in China and now reside in the U.S.
No agreement has been reached on when or if āShang-Chiā and āEternalsā will play in China, and no U.S. production has been scheduled for release for the remainder of November.
Photo: Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt in "Jungle Cruise," courtesy of Disney.
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