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‘Halloween Ends’ is absolutely crawling to a major box office milestone

The law of diminishing returns has hit #HalloweenEnds on its special day.

'Halloween Ends' stutters near major box office milestone
Image via Universal

Halloween Ends has hacked the box office bone, but won’t be bleeding out much more gross as it looks to fall shy of a box office marker of success.

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The culmination of Jamie Lee Curtis’s Halloween era arrived in cinemas in mid-October, but won’t be sticking around for much longer if the box office is to be believed. Ends slashed its way to $58 million in its opening weekend but has since languished in the weeks since with it now almost certain to lag behind its predecessors financially.

Teetering on $96 million gross worldwide, it may struggle to hit the almost expected $100 million mark. The massive drop-off in returns is further proof of diminishing returns for the franchise, with 2018’s Halloween grossing $250 million before Kills dropped off to $130 million.

There are a few reasons why Ends might not be hitting the heights of its predecessors. Firstly, the mixed-to-negative reviews of the film didn’t help, with its Rotten Tomatoes score of 41 percent. Ends also saw a simultaneous streaming release, which could be the deciding factor in the box office not looking as fruitful. Debuting on Peacock the same day as cinemas meant there was less of a cinematic event feel around the film.

Perhaps the crudest example can be made by referencing cinema’s biggest franchises Star Wars and the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Avengers: Endgame transcended normal movie releases by leaning into the culmination of years of storytelling. Halloween Ends was meant to be exactly that, with a story that began in 1978 finally ending, with a legacy star returning a la the financial hits of the Star Wars sequel trilogy.

Truthfully it’s not a fair comparison but shows Halloween Ends shot itself in the foot with a release that took away from the prestige of cinema. Halloween has always been a cinematic series made for its titular holiday, with an iconic score that fills auditoriums with unease. The inability to hit $100 million before its holiday may be food for thought at Universal.

Ends isn’t a box office bomb, however, with it comfortably making its $33 million budget back with $94.7

Halloween Ends is currently in cinemas, and streaming on Peacock.

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