mknepprath’s avatarmknepprath’s Twitter Archive—№ 20,383

  1. …in reply to @DavidKnepprath
    DavidKnepprath I just realized you probably didn’t see the full thread... I only went back the last 4 years, but I intend to do the rest at some point patchedtomatoes/972546972904288256?s=21
    1. …in reply to @mknepprath
      DavidKnepprath I... I wonder if it straight up tracks with box office earnings We’ll see
      1. …in reply to @mknepprath
        DavidKnepprath gist.github.com/mknepprath/4c0d008c43da8c7e1cdcabdce6e51e8e Since the category was introduced, domestic gross has been a better indicator of which film will win than critical response, but only slightly. The highest grossing film has won 70% of the time, while the highest rated has won 64%.
        1. …in reply to @mknepprath
          DavidKnepprath Looking at all years since 2001 may give us a flawed picture, however. The indicator has shifted over time. If we look at our current decade (since 2010), the highest grossing film has won 87% of the time. The most highly rated: 37%.
          1. …in reply to @mknepprath
            DavidKnepprath Narrow the scope just a little further... since 2012, the highest grossing film has won 100% of the time. 100%. The most highly rated has won only 33% of the time. Gross domestic income is now the #1 indicator of whether an animated film will win Best Animated Feature or not.