Disney's 'Jungle Cruise' Sinks At Chinese Box Office: What Went Wrong

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The Walt Disney Co.ā€™s (NYSE: DIS) ā€œJungle 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: ā€œJungle 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, ā€œJungle Cruiseā€ was overwhelmed at the Chinese box office by two locally produced films that premiered over the weekend ā€” the mystery ā€œBe Someday,ā€ with a $20 million gross, and the biopic ā€œAnitaā€ about singer-actress Anita Mui ,with a $6.3 million gross.

The epic ā€œThe 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 ā€œrampant piracyā€ along with a ā€œlimited marketing effort from Disneyā€ as further damaging the release of ā€œJungle Cruise.ā€

Also, Chinaā€™s government limits the quantity of international films allowed into the country. According to a Deadline report, ā€œJungle Cruiseā€ reached China within a batch of Hollywood productions that included ā€œDune,ā€ ā€œNo Time to Die,ā€ ā€œSnake Eyes: G.I. Joe Originsā€ and ā€œVivo.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, ā€œJungle 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 ā€œShang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Ringsā€ and ā€œEternalsā€ into the Chinese marketing, it is widely believed that the Chinese censors were reacting to negative comments about the nationā€™s Communist government by ā€œShang-Chiā€ star Simu Liu and ā€œEternalsā€ 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 ā€œShang-Chiā€ and ā€œEternalsā€ 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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