After the Ball Poster
After the Ball (2015)
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After the Ball Revenue (Daily) (with Theater Counts)

Domestic Total: 1.66K

Opening Weekend: 0.00

Legs: 1.22

Overview: After the Ball, a retail fairy tale set in the world of fashion. Kate's dream is to design for couturier houses. Although she is a bright new talent, Kate can't get a job. No one trusts the daughter of Lee Kassell, a retail guru who markets clothes "inspired" by the very designers Kate wants to work for. Who wants a spy among the sequins and stilettos? Reluctantly, Kate joins the family business where she must navigate around her duplicitous stepmother and two wicked stepsisters. But with the help of a prince of a guy in the shoe department her godmother's vintage clothes and a shocking switch of identities, Kate exposes the evil trio, saves her father's company -- and proves that everyone can wear a fabulous dress.


TMDB

6.4

IMDB

5.8

Metacritic

39

RT Tomato

27

RT Popcorn

43

Letterboxd

2.68

Daily Table

DateRevenue% YDTheaters
Mon, Apr 27, 2015$530+ 0.00%11
Tue, Apr 28, 2015$297 -43.96%11
Wed, Apr 29, 2015$443+ 49.16%11
Thu, Apr 30, 2015$385 -13.09%11
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Comps

Comps are similar or comparison movies that are used for analysis and marketing purposes. The way they are found is described in more detail in the paper. Comps always have release dates before the movie they are compared to.

TitleRelease DateBudget
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Profitability Breakdown

Domestic

Week 1: $1.66K

Investor Share: $993.00

Week 2: $0.00

Investor Share: $0.00

Week 3+: $0.00

Investor Share: $0.00

International

$72.6K (97.77%)

Investor Share: $25.41K

Costs

Budget: $N/A


P&A: $N/A

Breakdown

Gross: $74.25K


Net: $26.4K


Costs: $0.00

Profit

Profit: $26.4K

The profitability breakdown is based on Dan Murrell's YouTube videos (Dan Murrell is not affiliated with Reel Numbers). The breakdown only includes the theatrical release and does not account for any post-theatrical revenue streams such as streaming, home video, or merchandise sales. Additionally, the breakdown does not include any tax incentives, sponsorships, or product placement that may have occurred during production.