The drive-in is the
best business in film.
For 70 years, sci-fi, B-movies, creature features and westerns have quietly outperformed every other corner of cinema on a return-per-dollar basis. Cheap to make, easy to market, and impossible to kill. This page is the receipts.
The returns are not normal.
Eight drive-in era and drive-in spirited films, eight extraordinary outcomes. None required a tentpole budget. None required a movie star. All required taste.
Box office figures from public sources. ROI is gross-to-budget multiple, not net to investors after distribution waterfall.
Four structural advantages.
A drive-in style picture at $1–2M can clear its nut on a single weekend. A $200M tentpole has to be a global event. The math favors small, stylish and strange.
Drive-in fans show up — for Roger Corman tributes, creature features, spaghetti westerns, late-night sci-fi. They program double-bills, they cosplay, they tell their friends. Genre loyalty outlasts every algorithm.
In a streaming-collapsed market, B-movies, midnight pictures and drive-in revivals still pull people off the couch. They play best in the dark with strangers — that's the whole point.
Mad Max became a saga. The Living Dead became a universe. Tremors, Re-Animator, Phantasm — every breakout is a potential franchise without a committee in the way.
The supply-side gap is wide open.
The mid-budget studios collapsed into Marvel-or-nothing. Streamers are contracting. A generation of filmmakers raised on Corman, Carpenter, Bava, Leone and Harryhausen is showing up with festival-vetted scripts and nowhere to take them.
At the same time, the audience has never been larger or more online. Letterboxd's most active communities orbit cult and genre cinema. Trailers From Hell, Drive-In Asylum and Famous Monsters of Filmland anchor a fandom that buys 4K restorations, vinyl scores and limited-edition slipcases on sight.
Planet Drive In exists in the gap between the filmmakers who can deliver and the audience starving for what they make. We capitalize the gap.
Convinced?
Kenneth has the full thesis deck.
Ask for the long-form investor memo, the comp set, and the recoupment models behind every claim on this page.
