Hmmm...well I know I plunked down MY (I think at the time) 4 bucks to see it when it was first released, anyway.CinemaInternational wrote: ↑December 8th, 2023, 2:32 pmThey would likely try to reuse the original if they ever remade it, but I'm not sure if they will try. The sequel, 2010: The Year We Make Contact was the film that seemingly broke the camel's back and ended MGM's days as a major studio after it financially lost its shirt in 1984. MGM after that was demoted to a mini-major, or a second rung studio.
And another reason why I have to question you about this here CI, would be that after just now going to this film's Wiki page, over in the right column of that page it says that while this film's budget was $20M, it took in $40.4M in receipts just in North America alone. And in the written "Box Office" portion of this page it says:
2010: The Year We Make Contact debuted at number two at the North American box office, taking $7,393,361 for its opening weekend.[13] It was held off from the top spot by Beverly Hills Cop, which became that year's highest-grossing film in North America. During its second week, the film faced competition from two other new sci-fi films; John Carpenter's Starman and David Lynch's Dune,[14] but ultimately outgrossed both by the end of its domestic theatrical run. It finished with just over $40 million at the domestic box office and was the 17th-highest-grossing film in North America to be released in 1984.
(...and so I have to say from THIS it sure doesn't sound to me to be anywhere close to the financial shellacking that 20th Century Fox took after the '63 version of 'Cleopatra' bombed at the BO?)