The only character from The Hobbit I would be interested in at all would be Bilbo. Unless there is a horde of Hobbit trilogy lovers out there (and if there are I've never met any of them) I've no idea why InArt would choose this path over completing the Fellowship.
Well you haven't met me and I love the Hobbit movies.
We live in a time where box office dollars does not equate to good product. There have been a lot of movies that made a lot of money that weren’t well received in recent years. Batman vs Superman immediately comes to mind.
Articles point out tho that various films make more money as BRs or probably by streaming now. Waterworld comes to mind, so technically even "bomb" films can be a financial success. For me there are films like Solo, too, that deserve a lot better than they got IMO. It'd take a while to dig out Hobbit BR sales but AUJ was on the top at release (
Blu-ray Sales, March 18-24: The Hobbit Journeys to the Top) in 2013.
I suspect InArt just seems to be targeting main characters, what the licensing situation is, what materials and reference materials they have on hand (with the Hobbit there's a fair amount of reference, I don't know if WETA put out books about the LOTR costumes. Although, it seems there was, at one time, a huge amount of LOTR material - image cards etc.)
E.g. Joker, Superman, Aragorn, etc. Plus they have ASMUS' version to bounce off. But InArt may change their mind anyway, so I'm not as excited
yet. I thought they were going to do a Nazgul and Legolas.
I think most of us are simply worried that if Inart doesnt reach certain PO numbers they will either postpone LOTR figures for a long time or write it off as a loss and move totally away from it.
I'm confused about the market in general
. There's a lot that seems to sit at Sideshow (and I've gotten some good deals, just got the IS arrow goblin statue at 40% off Daily Deal.) At the same time, there seems to be a market for expensive products like silicon busts. And nobody in the U.S. seems thrilled about the economy, and far as I can tell neither the UK or China is in a great place. So are companies really depending on POs to gauge the market? I know I've cut back with stacking POs.