Box Office: the Worse the Economy, the More American Movie-goers

Published in Now News
(Taiwan) on August 24, 2008
by (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Eli Chiu. Edited by .
There are many indicators for us to observe whether there is an economic boom; the box office has now become one of the economic indicators. Nevertheless, the indicator is in reverse relation to the economy, because when the economy is bad, the movie industry, on the contrary, is good. Observing the recently released film, “The Dark Knight,” which has already raked in hundreds of millions of dollars, we can tell that the U.S. economy is in bad shape.

As U.S. president George W. Bush shouted, “It is now time for us to meet economic challenges,” and the unemployment rate reached 5.6 percent amid a recession crisis, the box office continued to climb up without being greatly affected. What a delight to the film company; “The Dark Knight” has already made 447 million dollars since it was first released on the market.

The U.S. film industry noted that despite the economic downturns, people still go out to the cinema. This spectacular phenomenon, in which people are willing to spend money on movies even in times of economic woe, in fact, can be traced back as early as the Great Depression in 1903. Furthermore, in 1982, while the U.S. suffered a 10.8 percent unemployment rate, the film “E.T.” hit a 16-week box office champion record, with ticket sales totaling 435 million dollars. The dividends alone paid to the film's director Stephen Spielberg were as much as half a million U.S. dollars, an equivalent of 15 million N.T. dollars, per day.

In addition, while the U.S. suffered the 911 terrorist attacks with the unemployment rate up to 6 percent, the “Spider-Man” film was still a mega-hit and made 400 million dollars. Probing into the causes of this singular phenomenon, the film entrepreneurs said that when people need an escape from their daily troubles, they will think of going to the movies. The box office, hence, has become an alternative to economic indicators.


??????????????????????

(2008/08/24 16:16)
???????????????????????????????????

?????????

??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

?????????????????????????????5.6%??????????????????????????????????????????????4?4700??????????????

??????????????????????????????????????????????????????1903????????????????1982??????10.8%????????????????16????????????4?3500??????????????????????50?????????1500?????

??????????911?????????????6%?????????????4????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Spain: Nobel Peace Prize for Democracy

Switzerland: Don’t Give Trump the Nobel Peace Prize Now!

Turkey: No Kings in America but What about the Democratic Party?

Singapore: Southeast Asia Has Made the Right Moves in Dealing with Trump

Ireland: The Irish Times View on the Trump-Zelenskyy Meeting: 1 Step Backward

Topics

India: The World after the American Order

India: The Real Question behind the US-China Rivalry

Pakistan: No Coalition for Reason

Pakistan: The Beginning of the 2nd Cold War

Sri Lanka: The Palestinian Story Outshines Flattery and Triumphalism

Pakistan: Israel Bent on Sabotaging Trump’s Gaza Peace Plan

Turkey: No Kings in America but What about the Democratic Party?

Ireland: The Irish Times View on the Trump-Zelenskyy Meeting: 1 Step Backward

Related Articles

Taiwan: Can Benefits from TikTok and Taiwan Be Evaluated the Same Way?

South Korea: Trump Halts Military Aid to Taiwan, and It Concerns Us, Too

Taiwan: Trump’s Japan Negotiation Strategy: Implications for Taiwan

China: Trump’s Tariff Policy Bullies the Weak, Fears the Strong and Applies Double Standards

Taiwan: Trump Stacks the Deck: EU-Canada Trade Talks Forced To Fold