A movie can be genuinely fun, get decent reviews, and still face-plant at the box office, and that contradiction kicks off our latest chat. We’re Brent Harbour and Ross Church, and we open with a hard look at Masters of the Universe in New Zealand cinemas, why the numbers stall, and why timing and money anxiety can matter more than nostalgia. Box office results don’t automatically equal quality, but they do reveal what audiences are willing to pay for right now.
From there, we zoom out to the school holiday movie season and the real-world challenge of cinema programming. Toy Story 5 arrives with full generational momentum and a surprisingly timely premise: toys squaring off against the glow of an electronic device that hijacks playtime. We talk early performance signals, why families plan their spending, and why older titles can vanish fast when new “must-see” kids movies take over the screens.
We also hit two wildly different examples of how movies find audiences. Obsession shows how a low-budget horror film can explode into a global phenomenon through concept and word of mouth, while Rescued Hearts proves a documentary can sell out when the community is real and the story lands, especially around themes like autism, anxiety, and the human-horse bond. We wrap with our opening-week box office predictions for Minions and Monsters and Toy Story 5, plus a peek at what we’re tracking next.
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Book your tickets to the movies at Cathay Cinemas Kerikeri here - or at Lido Cinema Hamilton here!