“One Battle After Another” represents something different. With a production budget of at least $130 million (some reports have it much higher) and another $70 million in marketing costs, it will have to have an extraordinary after-theater life to break even. Thus far, the Warner Bros. release has made $70.6 million domestically and $131.6 million overseas – great sums for an adult-oriented, R-rated, auteur-driven film that runs nearly three hours.
Still, Variety earlier estimated “One Battle After Another” will lose $100 million, a figure that Warner Bros. has disputed. It’s too harsh a label, but such a discrepancy could make “One Battle After Another” tagged as the first best picture-winning flop.
Awards season has a long way to go. None of the awards dished out this week has any direct correlation with academy voters. Some contenders, like A24’s “Marty Supreme,” have yet to hit theaters. Others, like Focus Features’ “Hamnet,” are just arriving. Support is also strong for another Warner Bros. title, Ryan Coogler’s “Sinners,” which might pose the stiffest competition for “One Battle After Another.” Both films are returning to IMAX screens on Dec. 12.
But a bottom line in the red is far from a unique cross to bear this fall. Aside from the blockbuster launches of “Zootopia 2” and “Wicked: For Good,” waves of would-be awards contenders – films like “The Smashing Machine,” “Roofman” and “Christy”- have fizzled with ticket buyers. It’s been a grueling fall for a wide spectrum of contenders, a context that makes “One Battle After Another,” comparatively, a smash success.
The biggest financial ding against it, really, is that it cost a lot – arguably too much – to make. At a time when so few films anything like “One Battle After Another” get greenlit, let alone with such budgets, the cost of “One Battle After Another” could even be seen as a badge of honor. Here is a movie that win, lose or draw, is in the fight for a kind of moviemaking that’s under siege. To quote DiCaprio’s Bob Ferguson: “Viva la revolution!”