Close Menu
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Box Office
  • Streaming
  • Award Buzz
  • Reviews

Subscribe to Get Updates

Subscribe to Hollywood Zing and never miss what’s making headlines.

What's Hot

Sheep in the Box: Neon First Trailer for Hirokazu Koreeda AI Family Drama

10 Famous Movie & TV Locations Every Pop Culture Fan Should Visit in the U.S. – Hollywood Life

‘The American Experiment’ Review: Netflix’s Tom Hanks-Produced Doc

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA / Copyright Policy
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
HollywoodZing.com
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Box Office
  • Streaming
  • Award Buzz
  • Reviews
HollywoodZing.com
You are at:Home»Box Office»Box Office Is Back. Now Comes the War Over Who Gets the Upside
Box Office

Box Office Is Back. Now Comes the War Over Who Gets the Upside

By Hollywood ZIngJune 24, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook WhatsApp Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
Box Office Is Back. Now Comes the War Over Who Gets the Upside
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Even before Toy Story 5 scored a franchise-best opening weekend with $312 million at the worldwide box office, dealmakers across Hollywood were feeling optimistic about this year’s theatrical prospects. In fact, since last summer, I’ve noticed fears about the future of the big screen experience consistently fading. 

Sure, “it’s still a challenged business,” a top talent lawyer tells me, but — and there always seems to be a “but” to such statements these days — “Project Hail Mary’s a great example of an original film doing really well. Michael, obviously. Then you have these low-budget films that are doing extraordinarily well. Everyone’s a little encouraged.”

As exciting as the box office momentum is, industry contraction has put downward pressure on budgets. Because above-the-line fees are often big line items, many conversations I’ve had with dealmakers inevitably turn to things like “why not just channel Jason Blum and his Blumhouse model of keeping budgets modest by paying scale with backend, and a big upside in success?” For his part, Blum told me back in 2024 that he thought studios would be “thrilled” to do that, but that talent and their reps hesitate because of the risk and delayed payday.

And a few years of lackluster theatrical returns certainly didn’t encourage anyone who was already wary of rolling the dice. That same lawyer explained that movies with budgets of $80 to $125 million have to make $400 to $500 million at the box office to generate meaningful profits, and in recent years many blockbusters that might have historically broken a billion were instead topping at $750 or $800 million worldwide.

“In a post-Covid world, not many movies were generating [the] kind of box office” to yield meaningful profit participation, he says. “The last several months, last year, of theatrical performance has been encouraging that people can go back to making movies that generate backend profits.”

This year’s box office is up nearly 15 percent from 2025 — which had four films top $1 billion, the most since 2019 — and that’s with new Spider-Man, Avengers and Dune installments and Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey still to come. (As Sean McNulty has followed closely in The Wakeup, grosses are on track currently to match the summer of 2019, when North American theaters raked in more than $4 billion.)

And, of course, there were low-budget hits like Obsession, which has already made more than 400x its $750,000 budget. Relevant to today’s theme, that film has sparked debates in the industry and online about who should profit in a movie’s success after its art director lamented her $300 per day rate in an Instagram post (though the question raised by Obsession is more about “flipping,” or unionizing, productions).

So, with box office the healthiest it’s been in years, I’ll dig into the state of performance-based pay today. I talk to dealmakers on the front lines of talent negotiations about who can negotiate a piece of theatrical profits, the emerging streaming bonus models and how these talent-centric concepts might work for below-the-line workers too.

Consider this your playbook for performance-based pay, including:

  • The five ways talent can get paid on a movie today
  • Who still gets Hollywood’s near-mythical first-dollar gross deals
  • Why definitions matter more than points in the profit-sharing “waterfall”
  • Why the Blumhouse-style tradeoff — lower upfront pay, more backend — still hasn’t taken over
  • The hidden studio fees that make profits vanish, and how Disney and Universal break from the crowd
  • How Netflix, Amazon and Apple are replacing buyouts with performance-based streaming bonuses — and who’s seen as offering the best and worst deal
  • How box office bonuses play out for talent, and why this structure is “resisted” by indie studios
  • What Ben Affleck and Matt Damon’s Artists Equity model could mean for below-the-line upside

Don’t stop here

Unlock the full story — and the no-spin reporting Hollywood trusts



Credit: Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
Previous ArticleObsession: Cooper Tomlinson Pulls Back the Curtain on Movie
Next Article Tom Cruise drops new ‘Digger’ footage as he looks back at 46-year Hollywood career: ‘Looking forward to seeing you at the movies’ |

Related Posts

Broadway Box Office: ‘Chess’ Hits $1.8M In Final Week

June 23, 2026

AMC Theatres Stock Plunges on Fresh Cash Raise to Redeem Costly Debt

June 23, 2026

‘Toy Story 5’ Box Office Haul Highlights Hollywood’s Hot Streak

June 23, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Top Posts

Zorace One on Music, Myth and the Making of 8th Gate

May 14, 202612 Views

2026 Emmys Predictions in Every Category

April 30, 202612 Views

Meryl Streep reveals ‘beef’ with Hollywood legend 34 years after iconic movie

May 3, 20267 Views

Assessing Warner Music Group (WMG) Valuation After Recent Mixed Share Price Performance

May 2, 20266 Views

Francis Ford Coppola and Steven Spielberg’s rise to fame

May 12, 20265 Views
About Us
About Us

Hollywood Zing brings you the latest buzz from movies, celebrities, entertainment, and pop culture.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Sheep in the Box: Neon First Trailer for Hirokazu Koreeda AI Family Drama

10 Famous Movie & TV Locations Every Pop Culture Fan Should Visit in the U.S. – Hollywood Life

Most Popular

Hollywood Music In Media Awards 2025 Nominations: ‘Wicked: For Good’ Leads Field

2025 Hollywood Music in Media Awards Nominations: Full List

© 2026 Hollywood Zing. All Rights Reserved. Third-party news and media belong to their respective owners.
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA / Copyright Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.