Stats:
For the week ending 18th October 2009, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 13.16% vs 86.85%
Blu-ray sales down 23.27% compared to last week, total spending: $25.09 million
DVD sales up 5.62% compared to last week, total spending: $165.63 million
You can read the latest digital edition of HMM (October 26 - November 1 Issue) with the above stats here:
Top 10:
A quieter week, but still busy compared to just a few months ago. Yep, the holiday season has started, and there are some stellar releases coming up. But for this week, it was still mainly about releases from the past few wee, or rather, still about Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. It again topped the sales charts, selling 3 times as many copies as the second place The Proposal.
The other new releases in the top 10 were Drag Me to Hell at 3rd (selling about half as many copies as The Proposal) and Land of the Lost at 4th.
The rest of the titles were X-Men Origins: Wolverine at 5th, Monsters vs Aliens at 6th, Wizard of Oz still doing well at 7th, The Dark Knight at 8th, still in the top 10 nearly a year after release (thanks to a price cut), Pinocchio at 9th (some Snow White related sales?) and Year One at 10th.
Market Share:
Of the new releases, The Proposal despite being the second most popular Blu-ray title, only managed 6.74% market share, again highlighting where Blu-ray is still weak. Drag Me to Hell, a title a little bit better suited to the Blu-ray market, sold only half as many copies as The Proposal, but had a 21.55% market share. A little bit of simple math tells me that counting both DVD and Blu-ray sales, The Proposal sold more than 6 times as many copies as Drag Me to Hell, and it's these titles that Blu-ray has to do well in as well in order to become fully mainstream. Land of the Lost, another new release, managed 12.61%, which is better, but still way below the average for a blockbuster Blu-ray release that is in the action/horror/sci-fi/thriller categories (ie. movies for male audiences).
The Dark Knight led the market share charts at 39%, followed by Pinocchio at 28%.
The complete Top 20 best sellers and Blu-ray market share tables can be seen here:
For the week ending 18th October 2009, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 13.16% vs 86.85%
Blu-ray sales down 23.27% compared to last week, total spending: $25.09 million
DVD sales up 5.62% compared to last week, total spending: $165.63 million
You can read the latest digital edition of HMM (October 26 - November 1 Issue) with the above stats here:
Top 10:
A quieter week, but still busy compared to just a few months ago. Yep, the holiday season has started, and there are some stellar releases coming up. But for this week, it was still mainly about releases from the past few wee, or rather, still about Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. It again topped the sales charts, selling 3 times as many copies as the second place The Proposal.
The other new releases in the top 10 were Drag Me to Hell at 3rd (selling about half as many copies as The Proposal) and Land of the Lost at 4th.
The rest of the titles were X-Men Origins: Wolverine at 5th, Monsters vs Aliens at 6th, Wizard of Oz still doing well at 7th, The Dark Knight at 8th, still in the top 10 nearly a year after release (thanks to a price cut), Pinocchio at 9th (some Snow White related sales?) and Year One at 10th.
Market Share:
Of the new releases, The Proposal despite being the second most popular Blu-ray title, only managed 6.74% market share, again highlighting where Blu-ray is still weak. Drag Me to Hell, a title a little bit better suited to the Blu-ray market, sold only half as many copies as The Proposal, but had a 21.55% market share. A little bit of simple math tells me that counting both DVD and Blu-ray sales, The Proposal sold more than 6 times as many copies as Drag Me to Hell, and it's these titles that Blu-ray has to do well in as well in order to become fully mainstream. Land of the Lost, another new release, managed 12.61%, which is better, but still way below the average for a blockbuster Blu-ray release that is in the action/horror/sci-fi/thriller categories (ie. movies for male audiences).
The Dark Knight led the market share charts at 39%, followed by Pinocchio at 28%.
The complete Top 20 best sellers and Blu-ray market share tables can be seen here:
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