The Second Time Around: Tracking the Most Successful Movie Re-releases

An email came in after the publication of my earlier article on double features. The letter asked about films which were re-released in theaters. I had mentioned in the article that reissuing films in a number of screens was a common practice in the good ol’ days before video and 3-D reconfigurations; as a for instance, the James Bond films were commonly teamed up and usually received a warm box-office reception from 007-worshipping audiences.

But how do I figure out what the most popular revivals have been over the years?

I turned my attention to my good friend David Bleiler, who keeps track of such things. Dave has an unusual but fascinating hobby; he keeps track of the popularity of films through ticket sales, and says that this is the one true way to tell how the true success of films. Dave is an old pro, having written about films for several magazines and authoring a few books as well.

I had mentioned the predicament to him: How can you tell the most popular films that were re-released in theaters? And, sure enough, he went to his stats and formulas and ticket counting charts and sure enough, he offered me an extensive chart of “the most popular re-released films in history.”

Some of the things I discovered:

Gone With the Wind is easily the most successful film ever reissued. Not only was it in theaters several times since its 1939 debut; the biggest reissue for the classic was 1967, where the film sold 58 million tickets, accounting for an astonishing estimate of $440 million in 2011 dollars at the box-office. Other lucrative theater visits for GWTW occurred in 1954 and 1961.

Star Wars has done quite well on the reissue circuit, boasting ticket sales of 36 million in 1978 and 33 million in its 20th anniversary edition complete with extra scenes and reconfigured special effects. A few weeks later, The Empire Strikes Back struck gold for 18 million in ticket sales, and a few weeks after that, Return of the Jedi returned to the big screen for less lucre.

Tom Laughlin’s Billy Jack was originally released in theaters in 1971, and fared well in theaters with 6.5 million tickets sold. But Laughlin, the writer/producer/director/star of the film, decided to take over distribution with an inventive campaign. In 1974, Laughlin four-walled Billy Jack (rented out theaters) amid a heavy advertising campaign. The result was an astonishing 35 million in ticket sales, totaling $270 million at 2011 box-office prices.

The Outlaw, Howard Hughes’ sagebrush showcase for buxom Jane Russell, was completed in 1941, but censorship problems played a part in the film being held up until its 1943 premiere in San Francisco. But it wasn’t until 1946 when the film caught on, Hughes-designed bra on Russell and all, for 23.5 million in ticket sales for United Artists.  The film was also brought out again in 1950 to showcase Ms. Russell’s physique and garnered another 12 million in ticket sales. Who knows how much this longtime public domain title has made on home video over the years?

D.W. Griffith’s silent The Birth of a Nation remains reviled (for its racist images and heroic depiction of the Ku Klux Klan) and respected (for its groundbreaking narrative filmmaking techniques) at the same time. While it was quite the sensation during its 1915 release with protests, controversy and a screening in Woodrow Wilson’s White House, the 1921 re-release proved very popular, selling 23 million tickets, as did a 1930 revisit to the Civil War epic with 17 million tickets sold.

Disney films have always had an impressive shelf life over the decades and, as witnessed by the current hit reissue of The Lion King, they continue to do so on occasion. Several Disney films, both animated and live action, have fared great on the re-release circuit with 1967’s The Jungle Book leading the way, capturing 17.5 million in tickets in its 1978 theater booking. 1961’s 101 Dalmatians (in 1991), 1937’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (in 1944, 1987, 1975, 1993, 1967,  and 1958), 1960’s Swiss Family Robinson, 1942’s Bambi, 1964’s Mary Poppins, 1950’s Cinderella, 1946’s Song of the South, 1940’s Pinocchio and 1955’s Lady and the Tramp  all had boffo success in return engagements.

The Disney reissue notion, of course, makes perfect sense: Re-release the family films as new generations of children are born.

There are several films that have been met with enthusiastic response the second time around for different reasons. For example, Mike Todd’s all-star 1956 adaptation of Jules Verne’s Around the World in 80 Days landed back in theaters on a reserved seat basis in 1968 after being out of circulation for a while. It sold 16 million tickets. The Jazz Singer, Al Jolson’s 1927 early talkie, got relaunched in ’31 after sound movies took hold, and garnered an impressive 15 million in ticket admissions. Silents other than the aforementioned Birth of a Nation were affectionately welcomed in the era of sound. Among them: Charlie Chaplin’s The Gold Rush (1925), Modern Times (1936) and City Lights (1931), and Griffith’s Way Down East (1920) with Lillian Gish.

Interestingly, Ingrid Bergman’s 1941 Rage in Heaven was brought back to theaters in 1946 after the Swedish actress became an international star in such American films as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Casablanca, Gaslight, Spellbound, For Whom the Bell Tolls, Saratoga Trunk, The Bells of St. Mary’s and Notorious. Rage in Heaven, involving a romantic triangle between Robert Montgomery, George Sanders and Bergman, sold an impressive 10.5 million tickets. Ironically, four years later—after her pregnancy by married Italian director Roberto Rossellini was made public—Ms. Bergman was practically blacklisted in America for six years.

What were some of the films you recall seeing in the theater when they were reissued? We’d love to know.

 
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  • JIM RICK

    THE 1967 REISSUE OF GONE WITH THE WIND WAS SUCCESFUL BECAUSE IT WAS SHOWN IN 70MM, AND STEREOPHONIC SOUND WHICH WAS SEEN BY MANY OUT OF CURIOSITY AS TO HOW THEY COULD CONVERT A 1939 FILM INTO MODERN TECHNOLOGY. PERSONALLY I FOUND THE SOUND PAINFUL TO HEAR AND THE TOPS AND BOTTOMS WERE CUT OFF. BUT IT BROUGHT IN THE CASH.

  • JIM RICK

    REGARDING THE DISNEY FILMS, THE ONLY ONE I HAVE NEVER BEEN ABLE TO OBTAIN A "DECENT" PRINT OF IS "SONG OF THE SOUTH"....FOR SOME STRANGE REASON, DISNEY REFUSES TO ISSUE A NEW PRINT TO DVD.....

  • movieirv

    Interesting note. Thanks for pointing that out.

  • movieirv

    May I suggest you look at a previous article we ran about "Song of the South"?

    http://www.moviefanfare.com/staff-notes/song-of-the-south/

  • Bill Shaffer

    The biggest re-release I can recall (aside from the '67 GWTW) was the 1989 one for LAWRENCE OF ARABIA. Maybe it was the full restoration treatment that brought the audiences back, but it sure looked good and the crowds did come back.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1675676852 Jerry Hightower

    As a projectionist I remember "Jeremiah Johnson" with Robert Redford being released and it was a dud. Not long after, Redford became a big star with other movies and Jeremiah was re-released and it did quite well.

    • Gemaica

      bleeliiabi on September 7, 2011 I sing the beginning of this song to my friend, who has a BA in English and is doing nothing with it. Then I have to laugh to keep from crying because I have a BA in Biology and am doing nothing with it.

  • Gord Jackson

    I first saw "Gone With The Wind", the 007 combo "Dr. No"/"From Russia, With Love" and "Song of the South" on reissue. Loved them all. Only wish I could buy a pristine "South" dvd.

  • Gary Vidmar

    One of the most memorable film restorations of all time was Abel Gance's NAPOLEON - it was presented with a live orchestral score by Carmine Coppola and the original three-panel Triptych sequence intact back in 1981; it went on a multi-city tour.
    The restoration cycle continued with the Garland version of A STAR IS BORN, which started a preservation trend that allowed a terrific series of classic films to be successfully re-released in the digital age: SPARTACUS, LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, VERTIGO and MY FAIR LADY all had terrific 70mm revivals.

  • movieirv

    Thanks for pointing those out, Gary. Those films were indeed reissued and should be noted. They were put out on a limited amount of sceenes, so their ticket sales weren't as impressive as the other films noted here. I also would like to mention that "el cid," under the auspices of Martin Scorsese, got reissued and looked fanatastic in theaters.

  • EarlThinks

    Te Original King Kong is my all-time favorite. When the most recent version came out and they re-released the original, there was a companion DVD that was in two parts.

    One was on Marion Cooper, the creator of King Kong. A 'real life' Indiana Jones and the 'real life' Carl Denim. Facinating story.

    The other was 'The Making of King Kong' with contemporary special effects and make-up artists who were inspired by the movie.

    For 'me', it was a very enlightening and revealing compliment to the movie that not only showed the 'backdrop and background' but also releaved the imagination and creativity to present a project using techniques that had to literally make up as they went along. OUTSTANDING!!!
    Just a thought.......

  • ed

    bride of frankenstein and dracula played as double feature on a sunny july day in 1954 to a packedhouse of kids for saturday matinee. if those old universal horror 30's movies played on big screen theater today i would go to them before saw 8

  • Tommy T

    And you won't be seeing reissues or DVD of Song of the South, and other films because there are scenes that contemporary blacks find objectionable. As we get further away in time, people like to rewrite history so it doesn't offend certain demographic groups. The emphasis is to hate Birth of a Nation because it portrays blacks in an unfavorable light when viewed with certain contemorary eyes. But what offens those eyes? Is it he blacks who remained loyal to the whites or the blacks who became rowdy, irresponsible pawns of Northern carpetbaggers. Both cases were true. It seems now that racism is easily tolerated if it is directed against whites. As and example, where I have lived there have been several sites of confrontations between whites and "Native Americans". Revisiting some of them with a foreign guest a few years ago, my guest noticed that wherever the whites won the confrontation, it was referred to as a "massacre", while confrontations won by "Native Americans" were called, "battles". It is like when pro-natitive American fever swept this country and "Little Big Man" was popular because it portrayed Custer as a buffoon instead of a hero. The truth is he was a brave man who foolishly let his predjudices overrule his tactical judgement. But I suppose that until "certain demographics", collectively and individually, are able to feel more pride in who they are now than shame in who their ancestors were, then this politically correct bias, will continue and great films of the past will be unavailable or censored. The next to go will probably the Tarzan films, then the classic Westerns.

  • MissKitty

    Hey Guys! There was a whole article done a while back here on Song of the South...check it out! Maybe if enough of us squawk about it they will release it on DVD...but, until then you can read 'why' it hasn't been released or seen in recent cinema...

  • Sperry

    Disney had the whole re-release thing sussed. They would release their most popular films on a 6-to-9-year repeating cycle, averaging 7 years. This would ensure the youngsters would want to see it again, then as parents, they'd bring their kids in to see it and get hooked.

    Nice planning.

    • panqke

      Great picks Chris! Terminator 2 might be at the top of my list! I can ttalloy tell the five year age difference between you and Matt! You are just a baby! hahaha!

  • http://www.facebook.com/kenneth.m.henderson Kenneth Henderson

    Song of the South is available in good copies. Google the title and see.

    • Deepak

      Those calf schettres do wonders. I struggle with bouts of plantar fasciitis doing those two calf schettres really helps prevent it!Tracy @ Tracy's Treats recently posted..

  • Jazz

    There are many films that are not released and it has nothing to do with public outcry.

    1959 Porgy and Bess film directed by Otto Preminger staring Sidney Portier and Dorothy Dandridge, Brock Peters, Sammy Davis Jr., Pearl Bailey and Dianne Caroll is being withheld by the Gershwin family.

    Many of the Disney films will never be released and it has nothing to do with race. That is a cop out. Walt Disney has a unique copyright of all of the Disney films with very complicated legal clauses. One in particular is the length of the copyright. Normally copyrights are 20 years and can be renewed for another 20 years. However, Disney has a copyright that last until 70 years after the death last writer of a particular film.

    Saying that maybe your great grandchildren will see Song of the South.

    They claim that the movie version was not what the Gershwins had in mind when they wrote the play.

    Utter nonsense.

  • Ken Strawn

    In retrospect, one of the most successful re-releases was the 1952 reissue of KING KONG. I can remember the previews shown on the small tv screens of the day. My uncle, then a 17 year old kid, wanted to borrow my dad's car for a hot date and to get it he had to take me and my cousin (ages 6 & 8 respectively) to see it. We embarrassed the daylights out of him by hiding behind the seats in front of us. But it made so much money for RKO that Warners was inspired to hire Ray Harryhausen to make THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS. THE BEAST made so much money in Japan that Toho was inspired to make their own version. Thus was born Godzilla, who has made more money for Toho than anyone.

  • Bob S

    I remember the '67 GWTW well. I was 15. But, years later, as a college student, I traveled across Philly to an arts theater for a rare re-release of Tod Browning's Freaks. I've always
    been a horror fan, but I had never seen it.

  • Jim Foster

    How many times was the 1939 classic GUNGA DIN re-released? I first saw it with my parents that year at the tender age of four, and it seemed as though it reappeared every three years or so thereafter. As I was to learn, this was a fiscal necessity for RKO, since the production went far over budget during filming, and it took several re-releases for it to finally show a profit. Anyway, it was THE action/adventure picture when I was growing up, and I saw it with friends at least four more times between the ages of 7 and 14.

  • Anne

    To Tommy T: In the case of "Birth of a Nation"
    those "certain demographics" dislike the portrayals of African Americans for both reasons: those who remained loyal to slaveowners as well as those who were hoodwinked by carpetbaggers. In both cases, Blacks are portrayed as people who can't think for themselves. And, those "certain demographics" of whom you speak might be annoyed not because they are ashamed of their ancestors, but because they feel pride in them and what they went through. They see these portrayals in such films as untrue, invented by whites in order to justify their intolerant and savage behavior towards people of color.

    Certainly you can't believe that the depictions of slave life in GWTW, The Birth of a Nation, and Song of the South, among others, were actually realistic. As I recall, these films showed happy slaves living satisfied lives in bondage until the Civil War interfered. This is the fantasy of the people who made the films, not "certain demographics". Blacks and Native Americans have the right to object when they see their history distorted.

  • Ellen Urie

    To Jim Rick & MissKitty [if it's o.k. to do this!]. I followed the advice of Kenneth Henderson & checked on line for Song of the South. It took me right to a site to buy the DVD & not a high price either! I'm waiting for it to arrive - it appears to be the original movie. Even has some scenes you can watch. I'm so happy!

  • Ellen Urie

    I received my copy of "Song of the South." It IS the original movie. The color is beautiful. Thanks to the advise to just click on the title & it IS available. My granddaughter & her 4-year-old sat as if mesmerized watching it. I'm truly happy to have found it!!

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