Stats:
For the week ending 17th December 2011, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 24.15% vs 75.85%
Blu-ray sales total spending: $89.31 million
DVD sales total spending: $280.58 million
These stats available from here:
Home Media Magazine
Top 10:
With two new A-List releases, both Blu-ray and DVD revenue made gains compared to the previous week.
Rise of the Planet of the Apes was the week's top seller, having confidently beat the second placed Kung Fu Panda 2.
The only other new release being Fright Night, all the way down at 14th on the Blu-ray sales charts.
But overall revenue for both formats was down compared to the same week a year ago, mainly due to not only the quality of the movies released (box office wise), but also the quantity. 13 major and minor releases occurred during the same week last year, compared to only 5 for this week, including six that made more than $20 million (compared to only 2 for this week). And Rise of the Planet of the Apes could not compete with the box office takings of Despicable Me, last year's top seller.
Blu-ray market share largely remained unchanged compared to the previous week, but is still up compared to last year.
The complete top 10 chart is below (new releases in bold, and Blu-ray exclusives are denoted by *):
Market Share:
Rise of the Planet of the Apes just failed to get over the 50% Blu-ray market share level, coming in at 48.58%. But that was still heaps better than what Kung Fu Panda 2 managed, with "only" 36.43% of buyers choosing the Blu-ray (and combo) version over the DVD one.
Fright Night actually did very well on Blu-ray, with 48.03% market share, but it failed to sell enough copies to really make any difference to the overall market share figure.
Neither of these new releases were available on 3D, despite Kung Fu Panda 2 being available in 3D at the cinemas (albeit with very disappointing financial results - perhaps the reason why the 3D version was skipped for home video).
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 18th December 2010 are as follows. It was this time last year that HMM switched from a Sunday-ending week to the now Saturday-ending week for calculations, and so no more major adjustments are needed (only some smaller adjustments based on more recent data).
As mentioned earlier, both DVD and Blu-ray revenue were down compared to the same week last year. But it can mostly be attributed to the smaller box office takings of the new releases for this week, $360.85 million compared to $640.92 million a year ago (with $251.51 million just for Despicable Me alone).
Blu-ray sales decreased by $10.03m (down 10.1%), while DVD sales decreased by $102.73m (down 26.8%) producing an overall loss of $112.76 million in combined revenue. This may seem like a lot, but compared to the lower box office takings (nearly 44% down), the drop in revenue isn't actually too bad ("only" 23% down).
Blu-ray's market share increased from 20.58% to 24.15% (a growth of 17.35%).
For the week ending 17th December 2011, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 24.15% vs 75.85%
Blu-ray sales total spending: $89.31 million
DVD sales total spending: $280.58 million
These stats available from here:
Home Media Magazine
Top 10:
With two new A-List releases, both Blu-ray and DVD revenue made gains compared to the previous week.
Rise of the Planet of the Apes was the week's top seller, having confidently beat the second placed Kung Fu Panda 2.
The only other new release being Fright Night, all the way down at 14th on the Blu-ray sales charts.
But overall revenue for both formats was down compared to the same week a year ago, mainly due to not only the quality of the movies released (box office wise), but also the quantity. 13 major and minor releases occurred during the same week last year, compared to only 5 for this week, including six that made more than $20 million (compared to only 2 for this week). And Rise of the Planet of the Apes could not compete with the box office takings of Despicable Me, last year's top seller.
Blu-ray market share largely remained unchanged compared to the previous week, but is still up compared to last year.
The complete top 10 chart is below (new releases in bold, and Blu-ray exclusives are denoted by *):
- Rise of the Planet of the Apes
- Kung Fu Panda 2
- The Hangover II
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2
- Cowboys & Aliens
- The Help
- Star Wars: The Complete Saga
- Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
- The Lion King
- The Smurfs
Market Share:
Rise of the Planet of the Apes just failed to get over the 50% Blu-ray market share level, coming in at 48.58%. But that was still heaps better than what Kung Fu Panda 2 managed, with "only" 36.43% of buyers choosing the Blu-ray (and combo) version over the DVD one.
Fright Night actually did very well on Blu-ray, with 48.03% market share, but it failed to sell enough copies to really make any difference to the overall market share figure.
Neither of these new releases were available on 3D, despite Kung Fu Panda 2 being available in 3D at the cinemas (albeit with very disappointing financial results - perhaps the reason why the 3D version was skipped for home video).
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 18th December 2010 are as follows. It was this time last year that HMM switched from a Sunday-ending week to the now Saturday-ending week for calculations, and so no more major adjustments are needed (only some smaller adjustments based on more recent data).
Originally Posted by Stats for week ending 18th December 2010
Blu-ray sales decreased by $10.03m (down 10.1%), while DVD sales decreased by $102.73m (down 26.8%) producing an overall loss of $112.76 million in combined revenue. This may seem like a lot, but compared to the lower box office takings (nearly 44% down), the drop in revenue isn't actually too bad ("only" 23% down).
Blu-ray's market share increased from 20.58% to 24.15% (a growth of 17.35%).
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