Summer Box Office Clobbered by Kryptonite: Domestic Revenue Barely Matches Last Year
The May to Labor Day season initially soared, but global grosses took a nosedive as foreign movie ticket sales plunged further and a glut of male-skewing tentpoles battled for scraps in the U.S.
Whatever happened to the mantra “survive until ’25,” the go-to refrain for theater owners and Hollywood executives trying to remain optimistic when the box office kept slumping last year, with revenue lagging well behind pre-pandemic levels?
Perhaps the mantra disappeared this summer when it became clear that not even the likes of Superman or even bigger and scarier dinosaurs could save the day. As the summer season wraps on Sept. 1, Hollywood is facing the worst-case scenario: May to Labor Day ticket sales in North America barely matched the $3.67 billion collected in 2024, even if the deficit was only $7 million. Piling in on, Universal and Amblin’s rerelease of Steven Spielberg’s 50-year-old Jaws beat two new studio films domestically over Labor Day
All had assumed this year’s summer lineup would have the strength to equal or surpass the $4.09 billion grossed in summer 2023. But it isn’t to be, leaving studio execs and exhibitors in a state of shock as they wrestle with how to operate in a new world order where moviegoing might never return to pre-COVID levels. (One studio that’s still smiling is Warner Bros., which has been a dazzling winning streak.)
“I’m very, very nervous for the future,” says one top studio executive. “There are all these studios and companies making movies. I don’t think there is enough of an audience for them.” That is not a sentiment theater owners or many other studios share — they think the solution is more product delivered to their big screens.
The season certainly started off with a bang, but grosses took a nosedive in the latter half as the life raft once provided by the foreign box office nearly deflated and a glut of male-skewing tentpoles battled for scraps. In North America, Disney’s live-action Lilo & Stitch and Paramount’s Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning fueled a record Memorial Day weekend. Lilo took in $182 million during the four-day holiday on its way to becoming the only 2025 title so far to cross $1 billion at the global box office. Mission: Impossible opened to a franchise-best $79 million domestically for Paramount. The late-May bloom resulted in domestic revenue being up 25 percent year-over-year, but the downhill slide soon started.
“Since June 13, we’ve had just one up weekend, which was July 11-13 when Superman opened,” notes Comscore chief box office analyst Paul Dergarabedian. “And beginning July 18, the domestic box office has been down every weekend for six weekends in a row.” The result: The year-over-year, much-needed advantage has diminished to a mere 5 percent.
David Croyé’s consulting and research firm JustWatch Media, which monitors trailer campaigns and moviegoing habits, found that weeks ago only 25 percent of people said they’d prefer to wait to see a summer movie on streaming, a healthy sign. In more recent days, however, that number shot up to more than 36 percent. He says this hits mid-size movies particularly hard, as well as being a major reason why the sheer number of people going to the cinema may never equal pre-COVID times.
“I don’t think the studio system will fill the gap that started from the pandemic,” says the founder and CEO of JustWatch. “It’s not as mass a market anymore. It’s about an even smaller group of people going to the movies more often. So there’s a lot more streaming and watching at home.”
Mission: Impossible was among numerous tentpoles competing for male eyeballs in the U.S. Before the pandemic, a studio could rely on the foreign box office to make up for any lost ground stateside. China alone could pony up $100 million to $200 million, if not more, in receipts. These days, a Western title is considered a hit if it earns $50 million at the Chinese box office.
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