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To promote the horror film Longlegs this summer, indie studio Neon didn’t take out a single TV ad.
Instead, it bought a billboard in Los Angeles displaying a phone number that, when called, played an audio message from the film’s serial killer played by Nicolas Cage.
The number received more than 250,000 calls in the first 48 hours—and Longlegs, which notched $22.4 million in the US in its first weekend, went on to become Neon’s highest-grossing release of all time.
Longlegs isn’t the only horror film to do well in the last year. Another Neon horror film, Immaculate, released in March, was briefly the studio’s biggest opening weekend for a film domestically ($5.3 million), before Longlegs; it went on to make over $28 million at the global box office. Meanwhile, this summer’s M. Night Shyamalan horror film Trap raked in more than $80 million at the international box office.
As moviegoers flock to theaters to see horror films, some advertisers have turned to in-theater ads to target the audiences those titles attract, who, cinema advertisers told us, can be harder to reach through other channels.
“As it typically is in media, the advertisers follow the audience, and the fact that we’ve seen audiences really flocking to these smaller indie horror films—the advertising dollars are following,” Christine Martino, CRO at Screenvision Media, a company that sells ads on national and regional movie-theater screens, said. “Those horror films, those indie horror films, have really become these water-cooler cultural moments that we have the opportunity to allow advertisers to follow their consumers to.”
Continue reading here.—JS
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