Blockbuster (entertainment)
This article refers to the theatrical slang term; for other uses see Blockbuster (disambiguation).Blockbuster, as applied to
film or
theater, is a very popular and/or monetarily-successful production. The term was originally derived from theater
slang referring to a particularly successful
play; in film industry parlance it has come to refer to a film that earns an amount of revenue exceeding some threshold. In a looser sense, it may mean any big-budget
Hollywood movie with famous stars that dominates public attention, even if the movie is a financial dud.
The etymology of the term is uncertain; some histories cite it as originally referring to a play that is so successful that competing theaters on the block are "busted" and driven out of business; others claim a derivation from the nickname of a type of
World War II-era
bomb capable of destroying an entire city block. Still others note that the term may stem from crowds of people that might flock to queue up for a hit play, perhaps stretching over several city blocks. Whatever its origin, the term quickly caught on as a way to describe a hit, and has subsequently been applied to productions other than plays and films, including
novels and multimillion selling computer/console game titles. The
Blockbuster Video company derived its name from the term.
The threshold for a blockbuster film in North America has often been placed at $100 million in ticket sales, a mark first achieved by
Steven Spielberg's
Jaws. However, because of steady increases in ticket prices since the release of
Jaws in
1975, the threshold for a blockbuster in the early
21st century is now generally set at $200 million; sometimes a distinction is made for U.S. and Canada revenue and worldwide revenue, with the "blockbuster" threshold defined as $200 Million in North America and/or $400 Million worldwide.
In response to the huge success of
Jaws, many Hollywood producers set their sights on creating such "event films" with wide commercial appeal, and increasing the use of promotion and advertising prior to a film's opening, thus ushering in the so-called "blockbuster era". Spielberg and director/producer
George Lucas (whose 1977 film
Star Wars was the biggest blockbuster of the decade) are the filmmakers most closely associated with the blockbuster era. The focus on creating blockbusters grew so intense that a backlash occurred, with critics decrying the prevalence of a "blockbuster mentality" and lamenting dearth of personal, small-scale films. Many within Hollywood were wary of attempting to create blockbusters or event movies due to the high budgets involved and a great number of failures that had occurred. This debate prevailed for a long time after the successes of early blockbusters such as Jaws or Star Wars. Support inside Hollywood for the blockbuster genre increased measurably after the successes of the Batman series and the movie Titanic.
However, when a film made on a low budget is particularly successful or exceeds the expectations of films in its genre, especially one of an atypical variety like the
Blair Witch Project (amateur-produced
first person narrative film),
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (non-
English language foreign film) and
Fahrenheit 9/11 (political
documentary film), all of which have made over $100 million each, then those films are considered blockbusters as well on account of spectacularly surpassing the industry's expectations.
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Box office bomb*
Box Office Mojo list of all-time U.S. blockbuster motion pictures*
IMDb - All-Time Worldwide Boxoffice Grossing over $200,000,000*
IMDb - All-Time USA Boxoffice Grossing over $100,000,000*
20 Years of Summer Blockbusters - Article