![]() ![]() ![]() Netflix has a reputation for making a handful of very good movies, and a lot of forgettable ones. “Red Notice” is a sign of an evolution in Netflix’s film operation as it tries to program for the service’s 213.6 million customers. It wants to make slightly fewer movies - but more large ones. 5.) It is reasonable to assume more people have watched “Red Notice” than any new movie released this year. However you slice and dice the numbers, the conclusion is the same: a couple hundred million people have watched this film in the last month. We also know that 328 million hours equates to 164 million Netflix accounts watching the whole thing once. While we don’t know how many people watched it – or how many finished it – we do know, thanks to director Rawson Marshall Thurber, that at least 121 million accounts have watched at least two minutes. (It also has an audience score on Rotten Tomatoes of 92.) People spent more than 328 million hours watching it over its first three weeks in release. Netflix says it is the most-watched movie in company history. A New York Times review deemed it a “vacant bid at franchise creation,” and the paper thought so little of the film that neither of its primary film critics reviewed it.īut “Red Notice” is popular, wildly so. It’s not going to get nominated for Academy Awards, nor did it introduce the world to new talent. It has a score of 36 on review aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes and 37% on Metacritic. “Red Notice” is not a good movie, at least by most conventional measures. ![]()
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