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‘The Irishman’ Is a Netflix Hit, Even If Few Make It to the End

Netflix released “The Irishman” in theaters for a few weeks before it appeared on the streaming service, to compete for Oscars.

‘The Irishman’ Is a Netflix Hit, Even If Few Make It to the End
A still from the series showing Robert De Niro, the show’s protagonist. (Source: Verified Twitter account of The Irishman)

(Bloomberg) -- “The Irishman,” the 3 1/2-hour gangster epic that debuted on Netflix Inc. last week, was seen by 13.2 million U.S. viewers over its first five days of release, a solid showing for a film on the streaming service.

The Martin Scorsese-directed movie attracted a bigger average audience over five days than “El Camino,” a cinematic follow-up to the TV show “Breaking Bad” that Netflix released earlier this year, according to Nielsen. But it fell short of the 16.9 million attracted by “Bird Box,” the supernatural thriller starring Sandra Bullock that came out at the end of 2018.

The Nielsen data is an incomplete measurement of viewership on Netflix. It doesn’t measure viewers outside the U.S., where the majority of Netflix viewers reside, nor does it measure watching on mobile phones. But since Netflix refuses to release much viewership data, it’s the best approximation of the popularity of programs on the service. Netflix declined to comment on the numbers.

Netflix acquired the rights to “The Irishman,” which stars Robert De Niro, Al Pacino and Joe Pesci, after Paramount Pictures passed on the project. The film’s length, subject matter and estimated cost make it a hard sell at the box office. The run time limits the number of showings in a day, thus limiting its overall box-office potential.

Only 18% of viewers made it all the way through “The Irishman” in one sitting. That’s not unusual for a Netflix feature. A similar number finished “Bird Box,” and only 11% completed “El Camino.” Many viewers have discussed plans to watch the movie in parts, and some reporters have joked the picture should be considered a TV series instead.

On the Friday after Thanksgiving -- the most popular day for viewing “The Irishman” -- 930,000 viewers watched the entire movie, Nielsen said. The film did best with older viewers, perhaps not surprising given its septuagenarian cast. The median age of viewers was 49 years old, Nielsen found. That compares with the average age of 31 for Netflix users.

Netflix released “The Irishman” in theaters for a few weeks before it appeared on the streaming service, ensuring that it can compete in the Academy Awards. It’s the current favorite for best picture at the award site Gold Derby.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lucas Shaw in Los Angeles at lshaw31@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net, John J. Edwards III

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