Categories
Selected Articles

Olivia Culpo reveals she’s on a diet days after giving birth

The model announced via Instagram earlier this month that she and husband Christian McCaffrey welcomed their first child together.
Categories
Selected Articles

The U.S. fertility rate reached a new low in 2024, CDC data shows

New federal data shows the fertility rate in the U.S. dropped to an all-time low in 2024 with less than 1.6 kids per woman.
Categories
Selected Articles

Cal State is still in the red despite tuition increase and spending cuts

Cal State is still in the red despite tuition increase and spending cuts [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
Categories
Selected Articles

Anti-Trump Protests Planned for President’s Scotland Visit: What to Know

The president is expected to land in Scotland on Friday to visit his golf courses.
Categories
Selected Articles

AG Pam Bondi launches ‘strike force’ after declassified intel reveals Obama admin’s flawed 2016 Trump-Russia probe

“We will investigate these troubling disclosures fully and leave no stone unturned to deliver justice,” Bondi said.
Categories
Selected Articles

F1 Targets Rule Change After Christian Horner Exit

Formula One is planning to curb instant staff transfers between teams to protect intellectual property.
Categories
Selected Articles

Kneecap describe decision to ban them from Hungary as ‘political distraction’

The Irish rap act trio were due to perform at Sziget Festival, which described the move as ‘unnecessary and regrettable’.
Categories
Selected Articles

Six more months in prison for Mountjoy inmate convicted of sex assault

Otto committed the sexual assault on the 18-year-old on October 26, 2022, while serving the suspended part of the sentence for the assault on the man in the casino
Categories
Selected Articles

Netflix’s original movies aren’t moving the needle — but it might not matter

A still from
Millie Bobby Brown as Michelle, Chris Pratt as Keats, and Ke Huy Quan as Dr. Amherst in “The Electric State.”

  • Netflix’s original movies aren’t resonating like its hit TV shows are.
  • Viewing hours for made-for-Netflix movies slid in the first half of 2025.
  • However, media analysts aren’t sweating the lack of film hits since the streamer is printing money.

Netflix has seemingly solved the economics of streaming, but it hasn’t yet mastered movies.

Viewership for Netflix’s original films shrank in the last two years, even as inventory rose, according to new research from MoffettNathanson based on data from Netflix’s self-published engagement report.

Movies made for Netflix generated 9.2 billion viewing hours in the first half of 2025, 7% lower than the back half of 2024, and well down from 10.3 billion viewing hours in the first half of 2023. Those declines came despite an increase in the number of original film titles available on the platform.

That suggests Netflix’s original movies have “gotten less popular,” Joe Bonner, who covers Netflix for Argus Research, told Business Insider.

The soft viewership comes despite a slight increase in Netflix’s overall viewership, which the company said rose 1% year-over-year in the first six months of 2025.

Netflix’s original movie output has also declined since 2022, according to research from Kasey Moore, who runs the What’s on Netflix site that tracks Netflix releases. (The streamer’s original film output is typically lower in the first half of the year, and company executives remarked last week that this year’s slate is “unusually second-half weighted.”)

Netflix original film output
Netflix has made original films at a slower pace in recent years.

Moore said instead of making its own movies, Netflix is increasingly leaning on licensing new and existing movies from other studios.

“They’re using other people’s movies to boost their viewership all around the world,” Moore told BI.

A Netflix spokesperson said the company doesn’t comment on analyst reports but pointed to the company’s latest shareholder letter.

Netflix’s movie misses may not matter much

Although Netflix has made a slew of smash-hit shows, like “Squid Game” and “Adolescence,” its original movies haven’t often caught fire — or impressed critics.

Audience reviews for Netflix’s most-watched original movies have trended lower in the last two years, according to ratings from Rotten Tomatoes cited by MoffettNathanson’s Robert Fishman, who authored the report.

Netflix movie review scores

“While the critical reception to Netflix’s original series has improved considerably over the past two years, the reception to Netflix’s original films remains muted,” Fishman wrote in the note.

Exhibit A is “The Electric State,” a straight-to-Netflix movie that Puck reported cost in the neighborhood of $300 million.

Critics panned the flick, which garnered a 14% Rotten Tomatoes score, though audience reviews were more upbeat. Netflix said that the film starring Chris Pratt and Millie Bobby Brown racked up 74 million views since its mid-March debut — seventh most among its movies in the first half of 2025. But at that mammoth budget, it’s unclear whether that bet paid off for Netflix.

If Netflix’s original movies don’t make waves, Bonner said the streaming giant may have to do some soul searching on whether original movies are “worth the declining return on investment.”

When it comes to film, Bonner said that Netflix has “a reputation for middling quality versus, say, HBO Max.”

However, Bonner remarked that even a softer slate of original movies “did not impact subscriber acquisition, revenue, or profits” for Netflix in its latest quarter. Instead, he said investors were excited about the streamer’s successful password-sharing crackdown and ad-tier growth.

While Netflix hasn’t yet perfected its film strategy, Comscore movie analyst Paul Dergarabedian said it can keep taking swings thanks to its “massive footprint and incredible financial resources.” That’s why he’s confident that eventually, the streaming titan’s movies can be as big as its shows.

Read the original article on Business Insider
Categories
Selected Articles

Listen to audio from Hulk Hogan’s 911 cardiac arrest dispatch call

Hulk Hogan, 71, has died after going into “cardiac arrest,” TMZ reports. Listen to his 911 dispatch call to the paramedics in the clip.