Media Money
- Twilight, Inc., A Worldwide Craze
- Oprah to Leave Syndication in 2011
- Sony's E-Reader Shortage and the Digital Book Battle
- Salesforce.com Brings Facebook and Twitter's Social Capabilities to Businesses
- Sumner Redstone's Companies Face Off Yet Again
- Can YouTube Revolutionize Citizen Journalism?
- What MGM's Sale Could Say About Value of Content
- My Exclusive Interview With Bob Iger
- Activision Blizzard's "Modern Warfare 2" Sales Break Records
- Disney's CFO-Theme Park Chairman Executive Swap
RSS FEED
- How Stock Investors Can Play Holiday Travel
- Time Lapse World Series Is A Great Play
- Hirschhorn: Greed...or Fear
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- May Day For Dendreon
- 100% Mortgage Financing From USDA
- Holiday Tipping: Who And How Much
- Deep Discounts Should Make It a Very Tech-y Holiday
- The Richest Members of the US Congress
- New Consensus Sees Stimulus Package as Worthy Step
- Wall Street Jobs Slow to Return Despite Record Profits
- Thanksgiving Week Stuffed With Economic News
- Black Friday Deals May Not Signal Retail Comeback
- Investors to Goldman: Be Less Greedy
- UPS Sets New Rates For 2010
- Victoria's Secret Hopes to Rekindle Desire for Lingerie
- 'New Moon' Takes Record $72.7M Box Office Bite
CNBC Correspondent
Today Disney [DIS
Loading...
()
] is bringing an old story into a new high-tech dimension: "Disney's A Christmas Carol" is the widest digital 3-D release ever. Of the movie's 3,683 theaters in the US, 2,035 are 3-D, including 181 Imax screens. The movie is also opening this weekend in 18 countries around the world, with many of those screens in 3-D.
The digital 3-D format has a reputation for packing theaters fuller than traditional 2-D showings despite higher ticket prices. The high margins and differentiation from giant home theaters make the long-delayed rollout of 3-D technology good news for both movie studios and theater chains like Regal [RGC
Loading...
()
] and Cinemark [CNK
Loading...
()
]. The limiting factor for 3-D films so far has been the limited number of screens. This wider 3-D release could give a sense of the potential for the December 18th release of 20th Century Fox's "Avatar" [NWS
Loading...
()
], which is the most highly anticipated and hyped 3-D film ever.
![]() |
CNBC.com |
Disney is investing a lot in making the movie "Disney's A Christmas Carol" a big enough hit at the theater that it can continue delivering revenue across Disney’s divisions (home video, consumer products, theme parks) for the long haul.
The movie cost a reported $175 million to produce, plus tens of millions more to market, with elaborate TV commercials that aim to capture the 3-D effects in the film, plus billboards, tie-ins, and a slew of new media applications.
There's an online game, a Facebook page, iPhone applications. The most unusual marketing piece: a five car train that carried an interactive exhibit promoting the show, through 40 cities, attracting a million visitors, and certainly costing a pretty penny.
All this investment is with the hope that Robert Zemeckis, who directed the film, will recreate the success he had with "The Polar Express." Like "The Polar Express," "Christmas Carol" uses digital animation combined with motion-capture technology. Warner Brothers' [TWX
Loading...
()
] "Polar Express" features Tom Hanks while "Christmas Carol" features another big-draw star, Jim Carrey.
Warner Brothers has cashed in on "Polar" year after year, re-releasing it every holiday season, and selling more than $300 million in tickets worldwide. Disney could easily have the same kind of recurrent holiday blockbuster if the film works, it certainly had tons of success re-releasing the first two "Toy Story" movies this fall.
The big question is whether this 3-D take on a familiar tale can lure in moviegoers. Will it be edgy enough for older audiences but not too scary for kids? Disney's watching the box office for signs of what kind of franchise its new take on an old story will yield over time.
Questions? Comments?










