Publications » Big budgets, big openings, and legs: Analysis of the blockbuster strategy
Big budgets, big openings, and legs: Analysis of the blockbuster strategy
Abstract
The blockbuster strategy---using big
budgets, stars, and advertising to create high opening week box office
grosses---is based on the theory that motion picture audiences follow an
information cascade by choosing movies according to how heavily they
are advertised, what stars are in them, and their revenue ranking in
the box-office tournament. Opposed to this theory of choice based on
herd-type behavior is the view that quality matters and that through
the communication of personal quality information the audience will
turn a non-informative cascade of the opening into an informed
cascade in which quality signals dominate quantity signals. In this
paper, we examine the blockbuster strategy using a sample of more than
2000 motion pictures exhibited in the US between 1985--96. Contrary
to the blockbuster strategy, we find that the opening is less critical
for successful than for unsuccessful films. The movie-going audience
cannot be manipulated and a movie will be a hit only if it engages a
positive word-of-mouth information cascade.