

I endeavored to capture all films distributed by the major film studios and their subsidiaries (including indie releases, but some very minor stuff might have been missed out).
Disney: 5 PG, 10 PG-13, 3 R (all by Searchlight). Notable films: Zootopia 2 (PG/428M DOM/1870M WW), Lilo & Stitch (PG/424/1038), Avatar: Fire and Ash (PG-13/404/1490)
Warner Bros: 1 PG, 2 PG-13, 10 R. Notable films: A Minecraft Movie (PG/424/960), Superman (PG-13/354/619), Sinners (R/280/370), F1 (PG-13/190/634)
Universal: 1 G, 4 PG, 5 PG-13, 9 R. Notable films: Wicked: For Good (PG/343/539), Jurassic World Rebirth (PG-13/340/869), How To Train Your Dragon (PG/263/637)
Sony: 2 PG, 7 PG-13, 15 R. A lot of these are indie films by Sony Pictures Classic, without them it is 2, 3, 8 respectively. Notable films: 28 Years Later (R/70/150), Anaconda (PG-13/65/133), Karate Kid: Legends (PG-13/53/115)
Paramount: 2 PG, 3 PG-13, 4R. Notable films: Mission: Impossible—The Final Reckoning (PG-13/197/591), The SpongeBob Movie: Search for Squarepants (PG/71/168), The Naked Gun (PG-13/53/102)
A question for those who are more experienced with the BO: The overall data shows that Disney and Warner Bros. gravitate more towards PG/PG-13 and R rated films respectively in their film releases. Is this to avoid competing with each other for the same audience? Or is there some cultural background behind this (I am on the younger side so I am not too informed on the history of the major US studios)
by fifamobilenoob123
1 Comment
Disney is for the whole family, WB is for grownups, Universal is for minions and marios.