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Tom Hanks' World War II drama "Greyhound" has boosted Apple's ambitions in launching feature films on Apple TV+, with plans now said to have increased to "Netflix-like levels" (via Fast Company). While plans are still being ironed out, this could mean that Apple releases a dozen new movies a year on Apple TV+, at a pace of roughly one per month.

greyhoundappletvplus.jpg

Two to four of these films are projected to be blockbuster-style movies like "Greyhound" or the upcoming Will Smith-starring "Emancipation." As of now, Apple is still purchasing films from various Hollywood studios, and the company has reportedly told people in the industry that it is in the market for "more tentpole-like feature films."

Although Apple doesn't divulge specific numbers, sources speaking with Deadline stated that "Greyhound" saw a launch weekend viewing audience "commensurate with a summer theatrical box office big hit." Thirty percent of the people who watched the film on its debut weekend were also new Apple TV+ subscribers, further incentivizing Apple to look into launching more tentpole films.

Despite this growing interest in launching more movies, one source specified that Apple still wants to be "very curated" and avoid Netflix's glut of films across a number of genres, which can be very difficult to navigate. Due to the global pandemic, Apple is also seeing an opportunity to bid for films that won't be shown in theaters, although specifics for which movies weren't mentioned.

Coming soon, we do know that Apple TV+ will premiere the Sofia Coppola film "On the Rocks." This is part of Apple's deal with A24, so there will also be more films coming from that studio to debut on Apple TV+ as well. Additionally, the company is purchasing older movies in hopes of building its back catalog and encouraging people to remain subscribed to the service for longer, but again it's unclear which exact older films it has acquired.

Article Link: Apple Looking to Increase Acquisition of Blockbuster Movies for Apple TV+ Following Success of 'Greyhound'
 
Is this the type of movie a lot of people would have gone to theaters for?

I thought people go mostly for... whatever has Disney's logo. I was going to say sometimes Fox, but then I remembered Disney owns them now.
 
Greyhound is NOT a blockbuster movie !

Far from it !

It is a good war movie that tells a certain, important story !

It got ALOT of eyeballs on it because many have Apple TV + for FREE right now (me included), & because of the 100-year virus pandemic !

If AAPL makes decisions based-upon Greyhound, they are Fools, BIG time !
 
The reason why this film was successful was because everyone was on lockdown at home and running out of things to watch. Also they had the subscription for free.

Of course any streaming service will benefit from blockbuster movies. But to define a renewed strategy based on this one movie that was successful on a so far unsuccessful platform is not examining the bigger picture of why it really was successful. They are therefore now heading down another wrong path.

Apples acquisition team for Apple TV as well as Apple Arcade are run by the most clueless execs. It beggars belief. Apple are squandering these opportunities.
 
Like any studio, or business in general, have to balance in favor of wins vs duds since films are not cheap.
 
It was a good movie, but hardly what I would consider a blockbuster. My grandfather served in the navy and my dad was an offshore fisherman, so I could relate to a lot of the nautical talk and charting, etc.

The movie really lacked any character development. It's not something I'm going to rush back to rewatch right away.

Apple needs to go all-in on this, not just nitpick movies here and there. Buy a movie studio or 12!
 
Frankly i dont get why Apple TV+ exists (Other than ego?). Apple isn't doing anything special here and plenty of other video entertainment services do this very well.
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It was a good movie, but hardly what I would consider a blockbuster. My grandfather served in the navy and my dad was an offshore fisherman, so I could relate to a lot of the nautical talk and charting, etc.

The movie really lacked any character development. It's not something I'm going to rush back to rewatch right away.

Apple needs to go all-in on this, not just nitpick movies here and there. Buy a movie studio or 12!

Boring and repetitive. 1.5 hrs of turn left, turn right, oh look he's not eating and can't put on comfortable shoes so he must be stressed .
 
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Greyhound is NOT a blockbuster movie !

Far from it !

It is a good war movie that tells a certain, important story !

It got ALOT of eyeballs on it because many have Apple TV + for FREE right now (me included), & because of the 100-year virus pandemic !

If AAPL makes decisions based-upon Greyhound, they are Fools, BIG time !
Yeah those damn war movies are never box office blockbusters!

Dunkirk making $525M, 1917 making $375M, Saving Private Ryan making $480M 20 years ago, those earnings, all lies!
 
I think Apple TV+ would be great for Apple if they pitched it as an Apple Watch or HomePod like product in their lineup. Those products are sold at low margins to make the iPhone+Services ecosystem more appealing and switching to android harder. If Apple kept charging the reasonable $4.99 subscription fee and 1 free year with hardware purchase, while making Apple TV+ series (pre-AT&T)HBO-quality shows and acquiring blockbuster movies that you’d usually see in theaters it would be such a huge value-add to the ecosystem.

Definitely not best for consumers, but it seems like it would work really well for Apple. It wouldn’t surprise me if they eventually pull a Safari on this and make it exclusive to Apple hardware.
 
I really wish Apple would pay half the attention they pay to ATV+ to gaming, now that iOS and Macs will share a common platform, they could build/brought in house an umbrella of studios just like Microsoft Xbox Studios and PlayStation Studios to develop triple A platform exclusives that make Apple TV, iOS and Macs a first class ecosystem for gaming. They could also have a fund to lure third party players to publish their titles on the common platform.
 
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