Tickets for Spider-Man: Brand New Day will go on sale April 29 in Japan. The rest of the world’s pre-sale start date is not yet confirmed, but is usually around the same time.
Tickets for Spider-Man: Brand New Day will go on sale April 29 in Japan. The rest of the world’s pre-sale start date is not yet confirmed, but is usually around the same time.
Wow… it seems like Sony wanted to put Spider-Man Brand New Day pre-sales less then 3 months before the film makes its debut after seeing WB started its pre-sales for Dune Part Three for IMAX 70MM showings within 8 month of its debut
ArmadilloSubject5068 on

waiting
Temporary-Body-3099 on
Studio’s really using concert ticket mentality to squeeze every last ounce of revenue from the few live action hit movies they have with these 3 to 12 month resale windows
gorays21 on
AMC won’t crash but this will have good presales.
MoonMan997 on
The Deadpool & Wolverine tactic I see
Once-bit-1995 on
This is earlier than Deadpool and F4 which had 2 months windows that were already too long. But I guess this is just how things are now. Long windows being used as a tool for hype.
dhui1996 on
It’s worthy to mention that the presale tickets in Japan (and some other Asian territories) work different than what we imagine. These presale tickets are essentially tickets of exchange, it does NOT guarantee that you can get a specific seat or showtime. Once the showtime for the movie reopens, you then use this presale ticket to redeem the showtimes and seats you want.
8 Comments
That‘s actually really smart.
Wow… it seems like Sony wanted to put Spider-Man Brand New Day pre-sales less then 3 months before the film makes its debut after seeing WB started its pre-sales for Dune Part Three for IMAX 70MM showings within 8 month of its debut

waiting
Studio’s really using concert ticket mentality to squeeze every last ounce of revenue from the few live action hit movies they have with these 3 to 12 month resale windows
AMC won’t crash but this will have good presales.
The Deadpool & Wolverine tactic I see
This is earlier than Deadpool and F4 which had 2 months windows that were already too long. But I guess this is just how things are now. Long windows being used as a tool for hype.
It’s worthy to mention that the presale tickets in Japan (and some other Asian territories) work different than what we imagine. These presale tickets are essentially tickets of exchange, it does NOT guarantee that you can get a specific seat or showtime. Once the showtime for the movie reopens, you then use this presale ticket to redeem the showtimes and seats you want.