Talk:Black Adam (film)
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Budget
editThe budget for this film is not reliably sourced. Box office mojo does not list a budget figure.[1] The numbers does not list a budget figure.[2]
Budget figures need to be properly referenced. The reference can sometimes be omitted from the Infobox if it is clearly verified in the article body, but it is far clearer to include the references in the Infobox too.
Digging into the article history, the budget range was added but attributed to Filmik.com[3] which is not a reliable source. The same editor that added it in the first place removed the reference soon after.[4] $185-200 million is a good educated guess, but it is not a reliably sourced in accordance with the standards of an encyclopedia.
This is why I have removed the budget figures from the Infobox for now. Please do not add them without a credible and reliable source (Variety, LA Times, NY Times). -- 109.76.194.74 (talk) 13:32, 18 October 2022 (UTC)
- That'll do.[5] -- 109.76.194.74 (talk) 01:41, 19 October 2022 (UTC)
- Despite {{Infobox film}} clearly saying that editors should not cherry pick budget figures, editors have again cherry picked budget figures and removed the $200 million budget figure stated by Deadline Hollywood. The documentation makes it clear that if reliable sources differ then both figures should be presented as a range. Editors should not assume they know better and exclude reliable sources such as Deadline Hollywood. Variety might be well be more accurate than Deadline but editors cannot know that for sure and should not pretend otherwise. Stop excluding figures without discussion or WP:LOCALCONSENSUS. Please restore the Deadline reference and $200 million budget figure. -- 109.79.66.165 (talk) 20:21, 21 October 2022 (UTC)
It baffles me why so many people continue to vandalize the budget range.[6] (Just one of many examples on this article alone.) and yet another example [7] -- 109.76.193.172 (talk) 22:15, 25 October 2022 (UTC)
Presumably, this movie did in fact cost money to make? Or was this a charity project with everyone participating for free? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.107.192.191 (talk) 16:49, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
Box office disappointement
editExtended two-editor dispute
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Editors are using no or only a single source to say this film is a disappointment. Please use more than that. One source isn't enough. Roman Reigns Fanboy (talk) 03:13, 28 November 2022 (UTC)
Hmm, well see below;
Moved to from my tp
@Roman Reigns Fanboy: This doesn't belong on my talk page, it belongs here. You wrote;
- You haven't stated just how is the Direct source not reliable, but if you wish to challenge it, the place to do that is right → here. You also keep failing to mention the third source I added, and the fourth source that was already on the page, and that I used again for my edit. So again, you reverted becuase of an issue with a single source, while neglecting the other three. Also, you've just started discussing here, after two reverts and a post to my tp. Meanwhile, I came here and posted right after the first revert.
- Erm, no. 3RR is just the bright line. You can be blocked for edit warring before, if you're being intentionally disruptive, and comments like this won't help.
- a) You need to provide a diff to support that bit about "other editors". b) You instantly reverting my edit, (twice now!) is you "imposing your own edits". c) well, if some other editor added it, then why do you care if I correct/improve upon it?
- Ok, well, that's not how we edit articles. Just because you don't like the fact the film is currently a box office disappointment, that some sources are even calling a bomb, doesn't mean that you can put hidden notes dictating to every other editor what they can and cannot add to the article. That kind of gatekeeping isn't allowed. (And I take it this means you did not get a consensus to support such a note on the first place, which means if you have re-added it again, it needs to go.)
- Ah, so now you're accusing me of ownership as well? While you were reverting a second time, (and threatening to revert a third time), and trying to fork the discission onto my talk page, I made one edit followed by a single revert, after which I initiated the talk page discussion... and you call that "ownership"...? That doesn't even take into account your hidden note trying to control content via the edit window, the sheer number of edits you've made to the article, or the argumentative approach you seem to take here on the talk page. And now, looking at your big compromise, you've removed everything from my edit, so how's that a compromise? I already said I didn't care about the WB 'break even' bit becuase it was crystal-ballish and likely to be removed anyway. You removed your hidden note because you had to and that leaves the box office bomb bit. That is supported by sourcing and it's on the list of box office bombs, so how can you possibly justify removing it? If at some point sources state the film made a financial turn-around, then maybe it can be removed then, but not now. Like I said, it's sourced and you have no justification for this. - wolf 13:46, 6 December 2022 (UTC)
@Roman Reigns Fanboy: I guess we're not done.
This is followed by a staff listing of more than two dozen people, including the CEO, CTO, Managing Editor, writers, podcast producers, etc., all with individual bio's. There is a "Press kit" page, that includes "key stats", such as; 8 million unique monthly users, 13 million monthly page views, 1 million Twitter followers and 10 million monthly Facebook reach. They have links for "Policy", "Terms & Conditions", "Corrections Policy", "Ethics Policy" and "Cookie Policy". They also have a "Contact us" page with email addresses, a physical address (that isn't a p.o. box) and a contact for advertisers. As I've said, if you still wish to contest this source, RSN is the place. (Actually, nevermind, I'll request they vet them myself.) But while we're on the subject of sources, do you wish to challenge the reliability of the other three sources I used? Or the additonal three sources I've noted since? (I keep asking and you keep refusing to answer... what's up with that?)
Your comment and my response are in this this thread, where they arguably belong, instead of the thread below. There is already a lengthy back-and-forth between us, no need for it to spill into another thread. I started the next thread for that very reason, so that it could be focused more on the article's content regarding box office performance, instead if a single content dispute. I'm sure other editors will appreciate not having to wade through our posts there as well. - wolf 04:12, 8 December 2022 (UTC)
After seeing THR's report that a sequel is unlikely and even sources who say it'll make a profit that it'll make profit due to ancillary home media (PVOD/streaming/discs etc), I've decided to self-revert [23]. It does seem every source agrees it won't break even at the box office at all. And WB doesn't consider anymore potential money enough for a sequel. So I don't see a point in disputing any longer. If someone thinks otherwise and wants to revert me or make any other changes to what I added, please feel free. Roman Reigns Fanboy (talk) 06:17, 8 December 2022 (UTC)
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Sequel...?
editConsidering what the "future" section currently states about a sequel, what, if anything, should be stated in the lead? - wolf 09:53, 11 December 2022 (UTC)
- Nothing. InfiniteNexus (talk) 05:46, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
- Nothing until a sequel is in production (not just planning one). Mike Allen 17:10, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
- Fair enough. Around the time I posted this, the last sentence in the lead stated "A sequel is in development.". Other than that bit in the "Future" section that "...WBD was still in talks for a sequel.", the info info in the article doesn't really look all that promising for a sequel at this point, so I didn't think that unsupported comment in the lead was all that accurate. (Hence this thread.) Thanks for the replies. - wolf 03:30, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Just so everyone knows, that claim about WBD still being in talk for a sequel has wrongly been made into a contradiction of THR's report. That Deadline report which quotes Joe Singer about sequel talks [26] was published earlier than THR's report [27]. Check the timestamps. After the publication of THR's report which states a Black Adam sequel is unlikely, Deadline removed claims of Black Adam 2 and Hawkman spinoff being in development [28], though it retains Singer's comments. Roman Reigns Fanboy (talk) 03:44, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Yep, as far as making another theatrical sequel with $150M budget + marketing, that seem very unlikely right now, (but who knows...?) That said, if WB/DC is looking to create another slate of interconnected films, (bringing Cavill back, + the cameo, apparently bringing Affleck back, etc.), then I'm sure they'll want to make the The Rock's Black Adam a part of that. Perhaps placing him as a non-lead in another DC film, or in a HBO/Max series... that's a possibility. Kinda' like how the MCU kept Ruffalo's Hulk around without him having his own film (tho' for different reasons). The point of this is to keep an eye out for any RS mention of further Rock participation in the new DCCU to keep this page up to date. - wolf 06:47, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Looks like the "major shakeups" are happening, putting all sequels into doubt at this point. Gunn recently confirmed that Superman films are getting rebooted. No Cavill. --GoneIn60 (talk) 07:12, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Damn. So he left The Witcher for nuthin'. - wolf 07:48, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Looks like the "major shakeups" are happening, putting all sequels into doubt at this point. Gunn recently confirmed that Superman films are getting rebooted. No Cavill. --GoneIn60 (talk) 07:12, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Yep, as far as making another theatrical sequel with $150M budget + marketing, that seem very unlikely right now, (but who knows...?) That said, if WB/DC is looking to create another slate of interconnected films, (bringing Cavill back, + the cameo, apparently bringing Affleck back, etc.), then I'm sure they'll want to make the The Rock's Black Adam a part of that. Perhaps placing him as a non-lead in another DC film, or in a HBO/Max series... that's a possibility. Kinda' like how the MCU kept Ruffalo's Hulk around without him having his own film (tho' for different reasons). The point of this is to keep an eye out for any RS mention of further Rock participation in the new DCCU to keep this page up to date. - wolf 06:47, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Just so everyone knows, that claim about WBD still being in talk for a sequel has wrongly been made into a contradiction of THR's report. That Deadline report which quotes Joe Singer about sequel talks [26] was published earlier than THR's report [27]. Check the timestamps. After the publication of THR's report which states a Black Adam sequel is unlikely, Deadline removed claims of Black Adam 2 and Hawkman spinoff being in development [28], though it retains Singer's comments. Roman Reigns Fanboy (talk) 03:44, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Fair enough. Around the time I posted this, the last sentence in the lead stated "A sequel is in development.". Other than that bit in the "Future" section that "...WBD was still in talks for a sequel.", the info info in the article doesn't really look all that promising for a sequel at this point, so I didn't think that unsupported comment in the lead was all that accurate. (Hence this thread.) Thanks for the replies. - wolf 03:30, 15 December 2022 (UTC)
- Nothing until a sequel is in production (not just planning one). Mike Allen 17:10, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
Semi-protected edit request on 3 January 2023
editThis edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request. |
It needs to be upgraded because Black Adam is nominated and the people deserve to know that this movie was great as well, despite the box office bomb 2A02:214A:8114:A400:5507:AB0C:9F5D:FC7A (talk) 10:56, 3 January 2023 (UTC)
- Not done: please provide reliable sources that support the change you want to be made. Lemonaka (talk) 12:08, 3 January 2023 (UTC)
"mostly negative reviews" claim
editNyxaros, I see in your recent edit, you combined some elements and removed opposing claims, choosing "negative" as the consensus in sources. However, we know that MetaCritic has classified the overall reception as "average or mixed". There are also quite a few sources out there that counter the ones listed in the article:
- Box Office Bust: 'Black Adam' Faces Theatrical Losses – Variety (December 5, 2022)
- R-Rated DC Scenes We Never Got To See In The Original Cut – Slashfilm (June 26, 2023)
- 'Black Adam' Weekend Box Office Powers Past Expectations With $67 Million – Collider (October 23, 2022)
- Black Adam RT Audience Score Best For DC Movies Since Nolan's Trilogy – Screen Rant (October 23, 2022)
- The Rock Comments on Black Adam's Mixed Reviews... – MovieWeb (March 13, 2023)
- 'Black Adam' Gives Dwayne Johnson His Biggest Domestic Box Office Opening as a Leading Man – People (October 24, 2022)
- Black Adam Rock Bottoms at the Box Office – Gizmodo (December 6, 2022)
All of these list the overall reception as mixed, and one of those is a more recent publication from Variety, which interestingly is also used to also support "negative" in an earlier publication. I don't think we should be labeling the overall critical consensus on Wikipedia when it has not been clearly labeled in sources. --GoneIn60 (talk) 21:23, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- Why are you listing sources here that supposedly counter claim the sources I added but are not mentioned in the article? Go add them to the page, some of which mention early mixed reviews. We do not use Metacritic's classification only when multiple sources say otherwise. ภץאคгöร 06:18, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Figured we'd discuss here first. Quite a few of the sources I listed were published over a month after the film's release, and in some cases more than 5 months later. Instead of bombarding the article with conflicting sources, I think it would be better to remove the summary statement altogether. Just let the primary aggregators, Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic, speak for themselves. Otherwise, you're going to have statements like:
"According to Rebecca Rubin at Variety, overall reception was mixed, but her colleague J. Kim Murphy described the film as drawing negative reviews."
- Conflicting statements like that would begin to litter the article, unless you have a better idea. --GoneIn60 (talk) 13:57, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Yes. I think stating the film was "not well-received" or "critically unsuccessful" could be used and the note could describe "mixed" and "negative" reception from sources, maybe starting with "Some publications described the critical response as "mixed", while others [...]". ภץאคгöร 17:14, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Glad we could reach some common ground! I agree with "not well received" along with a description in the {{efn}} that covers both "mixed" and "negative". --GoneIn60 (talk) 19:21, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Made the changes. Trimmed down the number of sources to 4 each, which should be sufficient. Thanks. --GoneIn60 (talk) 19:49, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Glad we could reach some common ground! I agree with "not well received" along with a description in the {{efn}} that covers both "mixed" and "negative". --GoneIn60 (talk) 19:21, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Yes. I think stating the film was "not well-received" or "critically unsuccessful" could be used and the note could describe "mixed" and "negative" reception from sources, maybe starting with "Some publications described the critical response as "mixed", while others [...]". ภץאคгöร 17:14, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Figured we'd discuss here first. Quite a few of the sources I listed were published over a month after the film's release, and in some cases more than 5 months later. Instead of bombarding the article with conflicting sources, I think it would be better to remove the summary statement altogether. Just let the primary aggregators, Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic, speak for themselves. Otherwise, you're going to have statements like:
"box-office bomb" is neither cited nor supported
editThis violates WP:NOR and is evidence of a hostile bias towards the film and possibly also Dwayne Johnson and/or film makers of color in mainstream Hollywood productions, depending on how the context is interpreted. It should be corrected or removed and that rest of the article should be policed for more evidence of original research and/or further negativity bias. 74.104.130.145 (talk) 02:15, 8 February 2024 (UTC)
- Wikipedia's Box-office bomb article describes it as "a film that is unprofitable or considered highly unsuccessful during its theatrical run."
- In Black Adam (film)#Box office, the third paragraph states "Several publications described the film as a box office bomb..." with five references:
- THR wrote Black Adam "will be lucky to break even".
- Variety calls it a "Box Office Bust"
- Forbes says the film "is still shy of the numbers it needed to overcome hefty production costs."
- Looper literally says "it's still a box office bomb"
- ComicBook writes "it could lose $50 million to $100 million in its theatrical run."
- If you have updated references demonstrating it is NOT a box office bomb, feel free to post them here or be bold and update the article accordingly. Thanks! GoingBatty (talk) 04:06, 8 February 2024 (UTC)
- Per MOS:ACCLAIMED, phrases such as "box-office bomb" are loaded terms which have become overly used and excessive to the point they are not as descriptive. Only Looper explicitly calls it such while the other refs are used to imply it, though Looper is not a high-quality source nor an expert in BO analysis. Per the MOS: "
Avoid weasel words. If any form of paraphrasing is disputed, quote the source directly. Describing a film with superlatives such as "critically acclaimed" or "box-office bomb" is loaded language and an exceptional claim that must be attributed to multiple high-quality sources. Be wary of source headlines, which are not a reliable source, that use these terms or superlatives, and are then not backed up by the body of the source.
" This article lacks such multiple high-quality sources calling it a bomb but highlights the break even point and other financial data, so those should be what is used. This has been an issue across these superhero articles lately, and I and others have started to deal with them at the likes of The Flash (film) and The Marvels. I'm planning on rummaging through this article when I have time to to clean it up and review the sourcing. Remember, all statements need to be sourced, especially labels we use on films. We can't interpret a label or phrasing like this that actually mitigates what is actually going on with a film's performance. Trailblazer101 (talk) 04:18, 8 February 2024 (UTC)
- Per MOS:ACCLAIMED, phrases such as "box-office bomb" are loaded terms which have become overly used and excessive to the point they are not as descriptive. Only Looper explicitly calls it such while the other refs are used to imply it, though Looper is not a high-quality source nor an expert in BO analysis. Per the MOS: "
Sabbac/Ishmael?
editShould the references to Sabbac later in the article be changed to Ishmael? I mean they're technically one and the same (i.e. Sabbac is Ishmael's villain name). Visokor (talk) 07:10, 12 April 2024 (UTC)