‘Bill & Ted Face The Music’ PVOD Revenues Lean MGM-Orion Pic Toward Profit

Authored by deadline.com and submitted by BunyipPouch

EXCLUSIVE: With the domestic box office still ailing, studios have been keen to make their finished films revenue events to the widest audience possible, maximizing profits by whatever means.

For MGM’s Orion, that meant releasing the long-awaited Keanu Reeves-Alex Winter threequel Bill & Ted Face the Music on Premium VOD and whatever theaters would play it (as the top big three circuits and some mid-sized theater chains don’t play day-and-date theatrical PVOD titles; Bill & Ted 3 was booked at 1,007 theaters, its widest point on opening weekend). The pic in its stateside theatrical release via United Artists Releasing has grossed $3.3 million since its August 28 opening, but in the pic’s PVOD run sources tell us Bill & Ted Face the Music has notched around $32M. The movie hit theaters on a weekend that 62% of theaters were open. Bill & Ted Face the Music was available on PVOD for $19.99.

The movie directed by Dean Parisot cost an estimated $25M, but MGM didn’t finance the title; rather, it took a domestic distribution for a fee in the low percentile vicinity of 15%. It’s important to note that MGM, as opposed to other studios that are sending their features to PVOD, had no skin in Bill & Ted Face the Music outside of $15M in estimated marketing costs. The studio, after its deal with cable and digital providers, will see an 80% take of Bill & Ted 3‘s PVOD monies for an estimated $25.6M. Out of that comes MGM’s distribution fee of $3.8M, plus it will recoup the $15M ad bill.

MGM was generous with those non-big-circuit theaters who booked Bill & Ted Face the Music, with some exhibitors telling us the split was quite favorable to them at 70%, which yields roughly $1M in theatrical rentals for the studio. That leaves Bill & Ted 3 with $7.8M in revenue before video and TV costs.

Still, film finance sources agree this puts MGM in a good position to profit down the line, even if the outlook on downstream windows such as digital (October 20) and Blu-Ray/DVD (November 10) are opaque. Even though MGM didn’t have foreign on Bill & Ted 3, and the movie won’t benefit from its rich TV foreign output deals, the big-swing moneymaker here on the threequel is possibly pay TV. Updated: MGM is putting the movie out through sister pay-TV network Epix, and sources estimate the studio could still mint a pre-negotiated rate based on the pic’s estimated domestic box office in the $5M-$12M range. MGM would take a fee on that and pass the rest off to the financiers. The question becomes whether the financiers of Bill & Ted Face the Music remain OK under this release model.

Studios remain officially quiet when it comes to their PVOD revenues, even though a lot of movies have made their way into the home during the pandemic, i.e., Liongate’s Antebellum, Warner Bros’ Scoob, Universal’s The King of Staten Island and Universal/DreamWorks Animation’s Trolls World Tour of note — the latter of which sources say grossed close to $100M stateside on PVOD. Part of the silence stems from there being no central hub, like Comscore with box office, to count and allocate incoming home entertainment data. That intel comes to the studio piecemeal, and it’s often delayed figures. Fandango and VUDU reported that during Bill & Ted Face the Music‘s opening weekend, the comedy charted No. 1 on both transactional video streaming services (but they didn’t reveal any unit sales or dollar figures).

Many will still agree there’s nothing better than theatrical windows and the ancillary revenues that come from them, but as everyone tries to figure out how to monetize IP during the pandemic, Bill & Ted Face the Music helps demystify the process.

Stalloned on September 30th, 2020 at 22:53 UTC »

I'm glad it did well, this film felt like it was made with respect and love by all involved.

Was awesome to see Alex Winter back, he didn't skip a beat as Bill

BunyipPouch on September 30th, 2020 at 20:24 UTC »

Really interesting read in there if you're interested in behind-the-scenes box office stuff. Actually pretty rare that you get that many details about a box office run and splits. TL;DR of the breakdown:

It's made $3.3M during it's theatrical run. It's made $32M on VOD.

The movie cost $25M to make, but MGM bought the domestic distribution rights for only about $3.75M and spent $15M to market it, for a total spend of $18.75M.

MGM will keep 80% of the VOD money so about $25.6M. Theaters had a healthy split of 70% of theatrical money so MGM only made about $1M from the theatrical run. So, around $18.75M spent and $26.6M so far in revenue, with more to go.

Most likely they will end up at ~$10M pure profit. Awesome to see a success story/good news for a movie's run during COVID.

Thatoneasian9600 on September 30th, 2020 at 20:17 UTC »

Most Excellent