Stats:
For the week ending 12th November 2011, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 29.60% vs 70.40%
Blu-ray sales total spending: $54.22 million
DVD sales total spending: $128.95 million
These stats available from here:
Home Media Magazine
Top 10:
It's that time of the year, and for the last time ever, it's Harry Potter week again. With the release of the latest, and last, Harry Potter movie, the top 10 Blu-ray charts was completely dominated by the final installment of the boy wizard's saga.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 was the top selling title of the week, surging ahead of the seconded placed Cars 2, which only itself barely managed to beat Deathly Hallows - Part 1. Places 8 to 10 were also taken by Harry Potter movies, and the 4 other movies were spread out through the next 10 spots as well.
Those keen with maths might have noticed that's actually 9 entries, for 8 movies, but the extra entry was for the Harry Potter 8-film collection box set, which came in at 8th.
For the other new releases of the week, The Change-Up was 5th, and um, that was it (if you don't include the Barbie direct to video release that wasn't even released on Blu-ray, that is).
The complete top 10 chart is below (new releases in bold, and Blu-ray exclusives are denoted by *):
Market Share:
All of the Harry Potter movies hovered around the 50% market share level, but the 8-film box set (56.31%) and Deathly Hallows Part 1 (53.48%) both exceeded the 50% level, with Deathly Hallows Part 2 getting 48.94%.
To me, this is somewhat disappointing for Blu-ray (although if this had happened last year, it would have been a record), mainly that I would have thought the people that would buy the box set would be those that already have at least a couple of the films on DVD already, and this kind of "upgrade" usually means a high market share level for the Blu-ray version. Same with Deathly Hallows Part 1, which has been out long enough for it to not become a Blu-ray upgrader's buy. But I guess this must mean a lot of buyers are still new to the HP franchise, which explains the relatively high DVD box set market share.
The Change-Up managed 40.45%, if anybody cares.
The 3D version of both parts of Deathly Hallows, which was a Best Buy exclusive, had 13% and 7% market share (that's market share as a percentage of all disc sales, and so the same market share calculations as the other figures listed here).
You can see the Blu-ray top 20 market share chart here:
Top 20 Blu-ray Market Share Chart
Year on Year Comparison
The stats for the week ending 13th November 2010 are as follows (you can see stats and analysis for the week ending 14th November 2010 here - note that data has since been revised, and the reporting period has changed as well, but this historical data is still useful for comparison purposes).
This time last year, there wasn't an A-List release (Scott Pilgrims and Grown-Ups were the new releases back then), and Toy Story 3 was still top of the chart.
Blu-ray sales increased by $22mil (up 68%), while DVD sales decreased by $17.58mil (down 12%) producing an overall gain of $4.42 million in combined revenue. Revenue growth is always impressive given the increasing market share of digital downloads that aren't counted in these stats, but only if you don't consider the caliber of releases between this year and last. $4.42 million revenue gain comparing the final Harry Potter installment to Grown-Ups, which earned less than half at the box office, would seem to suggest something is not quite right.
Blu-ray's market share increased from 18.03% to 29.60% (a growth of 64.17%).
For the week ending 12th November 2011, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 29.60% vs 70.40%
Blu-ray sales total spending: $54.22 million
DVD sales total spending: $128.95 million
These stats available from here:
Home Media Magazine
Top 10:
It's that time of the year, and for the last time ever, it's Harry Potter week again. With the release of the latest, and last, Harry Potter movie, the top 10 Blu-ray charts was completely dominated by the final installment of the boy wizard's saga.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 was the top selling title of the week, surging ahead of the seconded placed Cars 2, which only itself barely managed to beat Deathly Hallows - Part 1. Places 8 to 10 were also taken by Harry Potter movies, and the 4 other movies were spread out through the next 10 spots as well.
Those keen with maths might have noticed that's actually 9 entries, for 8 movies, but the extra entry was for the Harry Potter 8-film collection box set, which came in at 8th.
For the other new releases of the week, The Change-Up was 5th, and um, that was it (if you don't include the Barbie direct to video release that wasn't even released on Blu-ray, that is).
The complete top 10 chart is below (new releases in bold, and Blu-ray exclusives are denoted by *):
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2
- Cars 2
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1
- *Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
- The Change-Up
- *Lion King
- Captain America: The First Avenger
- Harry Potter Complete 8-Film Collection
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
- Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Market Share:
All of the Harry Potter movies hovered around the 50% market share level, but the 8-film box set (56.31%) and Deathly Hallows Part 1 (53.48%) both exceeded the 50% level, with Deathly Hallows Part 2 getting 48.94%.
To me, this is somewhat disappointing for Blu-ray (although if this had happened last year, it would have been a record), mainly that I would have thought the people that would buy the box set would be those that already have at least a couple of the films on DVD already, and this kind of "upgrade" usually means a high market share level for the Blu-ray version. Same with Deathly Hallows Part 1, which has been out long enough for it to not become a Blu-ray upgrader's buy. But I guess this must mean a lot of buyers are still new to the HP franchise, which explains the relatively high DVD box set market share.
The Change-Up managed 40.45%, if anybody cares.
The 3D version of both parts of Deathly Hallows, which was a Best Buy exclusive, had 13% and 7% market share (that's market share as a percentage of all disc sales, and so the same market share calculations as the other figures listed here).
You can see the Blu-ray top 20 market share chart here:
Top 20 Blu-ray Market Share Chart
Year on Year Comparison
The stats for the week ending 13th November 2010 are as follows (you can see stats and analysis for the week ending 14th November 2010 here - note that data has since been revised, and the reporting period has changed as well, but this historical data is still useful for comparison purposes).
Originally Posted by Stats for week ending 13th November 2010
Blu-ray sales increased by $22mil (up 68%), while DVD sales decreased by $17.58mil (down 12%) producing an overall gain of $4.42 million in combined revenue. Revenue growth is always impressive given the increasing market share of digital downloads that aren't counted in these stats, but only if you don't consider the caliber of releases between this year and last. $4.42 million revenue gain comparing the final Harry Potter installment to Grown-Ups, which earned less than half at the box office, would seem to suggest something is not quite right.
Blu-ray's market share increased from 18.03% to 29.60% (a growth of 64.17%).
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