"Guardians of the Galaxy" is the top earner of this year's visual effects Oscar nominees, at $774M global box office.
Just as I did for 2013 films, 2012 films and 2011 films,
I thought it would be interesting to track the average global box
office grosses from this year's Academy Award nominees, per category.
The five nominees for this year's visual effects earned a total global box office gross of over $3.6B. All of this year's films were huge hits, unlike other years which usually include at least one monster hit, and a few sub-$200M earners. Unlike the three previous years, no single 2014 visual effects nominee grossed over $1B.
The last four years at a glance:
Average global box office of Best Visual Effects films:
2014 (87th Academy Awards) - $723M
Top Grosser: Guardians of the Galaxy, $774M
2013 (86th Academy Awards) - $698M
Top Grosser: Iron Man 3, $1.2B
2012 (85th Academy Awards) - $763M
Top Grosser: The Avengers, $1.5B
2011 (84th Academy Awards) - $662M
Top Grosser: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II, 1.35B
Repeating what I've said in the past, this chart should surprise no one. I wrote all my caveats and explanations in previous articles, so I won't rehash them here. Put simply, the average box office earnings from 'the best' visual effects films films far exceeds any other discipline's 'best' work, according to the Academy Awards.
I wrote this concerning the 2011 box office when I charted the box office averages for the 84th Academy Awards, and unfortunately, this still is true.
It also illustrates the sad state of the visual effects community. The average Oscar nominee for visual effects made over $662 million globally, and yet our industry has relatively little power in Hollywood.
All data from boxofficemojo.com .
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