Sunday, February 09, 2025

WORLDWIDE BOX OFFICE FOR WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 9, 2025

WORLDWIDE BOX OFFICE FOR WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 9, 2025 

A film's gross for the last seven days, followed by its total worldwide gross. I begin with data from 

Comscore and then pull from every other source available. 


1. Ne Zha 2–$650m / $1.096b worldwide total 

2. Detective Chinatown 1900–$124m / $384m ww 

3. Boonie Bears: Future Reborn–$27m / $87m ww 

4. Dog Man–$25m / $66m ww 

5. Creation of the Gods 2: Demon Force–$24m / $152m ww 

6. Mufasa: The Lion King–$18m / $671m ww

7. Operation Hadal–$13m / $48m ww 

8. A Complete Unknown–$12m / $90m ww

9. Companion–$12m / $27m ww 

10. Paddington in Peru–$11m / $104m ww 

11. Sonic The Hedgehog 3–$16m /$472m ww 

12. Babygirl–$10m / $58m ww

13. Flight Risk–$9m / $34m ww

14. Heart Eyes–$9m ww debut 

15. The Brutalist–$7m / $25m ww 

16. Love Hurts–$7m ww debut

17. Legend of the Condor Heroes: The Gallants–$8m / $86m ww 

18. Conclave–$5m / $92m ww

19. Wicked–$4m / $723m ww

20. Den of Thieves 2: Pantera–$4m / $54m ww

21. One of Them Days–$4m / $39m ww 

22. Wolf Man–$3m / $33m ww

23. Becoming Led Zeppelin–$3m ww debut 

24. Moana 2–$2m / $1,039b ww

25. Hitman2–$2m / $15m ww 

26. Secret: Untold Melody–$2m / $4m ww 

27. September 5–$2m / $4m ww 

28. Gladiator II–$1m / $462m ww

29. Nosferatu–$1m / $173m ww

30. I'm Still Here–$1m / $22m ww 

31. Better Man–$1m / $20m ww 

32. Presence–$1m / $8m ww

33. The Three Investigators: Carpathian Dog aka Die Drei ??? Und Der Karpatenhund–$1m / $7m ww


Bold: movies that have or likely will triple their reported budgets. That's my standard for a movie being a box office hit from theatrical alone. Many films will be profitable for a studio even if they don't triple their reported budget, but it's a good marker to indicate a big hit. 


ANALYSIS 

The Chinese box office continues to set records. Three different movies have proven big winners: the eleventh in the Boonie Bears animated franchise, the fourth in the live action Detective Chinatown franchise and the animated blockbuster Ne Zha 2. It is now the first film in history to gross $1 billion in one market alone. The previous record holder was Star Wars: The Force Awakens, which  grossed $936.7m in North America alone. (That's a good thing since it cost a reported $500mb!) Worldwide it hit $2b in all. Will Ne Zha 2 match it? Unlikely. The original grossed more than $700m in China alone, but in North America it grossed less than $4m. In the entire rest of the world it grossed less than $40m. 

Because it's Super Bowl weekend, not much is happening in the U.S. But next weekend we'll see the worldwide launch of Captain America: Brave New World. Will Anthony Mackie win fans as the new Cap? Early tracking looks good for opening weekend and it sure would help if the movie is actually any good. We shall see. 

While we wait, I'm launching a new permanent feature: a list of the movies that have proven hits from theatrical alone. I'll group them in three categories: big budget ($100m+), mid-sized (hmm, maybe $21mb-$99mb) and small budget ($20mb or less). Blockbusters can get you only so far; for theatrical to succeed, we need all types of movies: low budget horror flicks, mid-sized movies for adults or potential offbeat franchises and would-be blockbusters. 


2025 HIT FILMS

Here's a list of all the hit films making money in 2025. My rule of thumb is that films should gross roughly at least three times as much as their reported budget. Some people now say a movie need only make 2 1/2 times as much as their budget but I'm sticking with the traditional formula. Of course, we don't really know a movie's budget or the cost of advertising or the backroom deals. Remember, just because a movie isn't a hit from theatrical alone doesn't mean they're losing money. Far from it. We can't dive deep into Hollywood accounting. But we can spot the really big hits that will change careers, launch franchises and generally pay the bills. A few international films probably made the cut but since I don't have even a reported budget, I hate to reward them with hit status. Also, I'll include movies from 2024 if they make the majority of their money in 2025. Here goes. 


Big Budget ($100mb+)

Detective Chinatown 1900 ($125mb est) 


Mid-sized budget ($21mb-$99mb) 

Boonie Bears: Future Reborn ($50mb?) 

Dog Man ($40mb) 

Ne Zha 2 ($80mb) 

Nosferatu ($50mb) 


Small Budget ($20mb or less)

Babygirl ($20mb) 

The Brutalist ($10mb) 

Companion ($10mb) 

Conclave ($20mb; must gross $106m to belong on this list) 

I'm Still Here ($?mb but likely less than $10mb) 

One of Them Days ($14mb) 

Presence ($2mb) 


NOTES 

mb = a film's budget in millions of US dollars; ww = worldwide


1. Ne Zha 2–Reported $80mb. Chinese animated fantasy sequel to the 2019 smash which cost about $20m and grossed $743m. A spin-off film Jiang Ziya was hobbled by COVID but grossed $243m. Now the direct sequel Ne Zha 2 cost $80m and our spunky heroine (based on a famed mythological character around for centuries) takes on sea monsters. The series is based on Investiture of the Gods by Xu Zhonglin from the 16th century. 

2. Detective Chinatown 1900–$125mb at least? This is the fourth in a wildly popular buddy comedy mystery series. Think oh, Rush Hour? 48 Hours? Each film cost more than the one before and grossed more. Since we're on film #4 and it's a period movie set in San Francisco, it's safe to assume this cost more than #3, which cost $117m and grossed $686m worldwide. I mean, $150mb is probably more realistic, at least. Oh and clues in this one indicate the next film in the series will be set in London. So, Detective Chinatown 1920, here we come

3. Boonie Bears: Future Reborn–$50mb? This once low budget animated franchise keeps getting bigger and bigger at the box office. Film #9 grossed $220m and #10 grossed $270m. 

4. Dog Man–A reported $40mb. It's always good to gross your budget on opening week. Plus, the books are funny, the reviews are good, the audience response is great and it has the rest of the world to open in. So get ready for Dog Man 2. 

5. Creation of the Gods 2: Demon Force–$110mb? Creation of the Gods is a live action fantasy trilogy that was shot all at once over an 18 month period, a la Lord of the Rings. Since the first part cost $110m, presumably parts two and three cost at least as much, though their initial releases were delayed because of time-consuming special effects. And guess what? Like Ne Zha 1 and 2, this too is based on Investiture of the Gods, making Ming dynasty author Xu Zhonglin the hottest scribe in town. Yes, there are a handful of English translations of the tales, but none of a single professional review and only one even has a handful of reader reviews, so I would be wary. And I'm still waiting for a good translation of the epic from which Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was drawn. 

6. Mufasa: The Lion King–$200mb. 

7Operation Hadal–$150mb. In director Dante Lam's Chinese action film, mercenaries have taken over a deep sea platform in Chinese waters and well, the Chinese Navy is not about to take that lying down.  It's a sequel to Operation Red Sea which cost $70m and grossed almost $600m. This cost twice as much and looks like it will struggle to gross half as much. Not good. 

8. A Complete Unknown–$60mb+ for this Bob Dylan biopic? That's a lot of money for a film about Dylan going electric at Newport. I mean, I wanted to see it but then I'm a Dylan fanatic. But $180m worldwide seems highly unlikely to me, if not impossible. (Do other countries give a toss about this? Is Chalamet a big enough draw for this story? I doubt it.) I'm glad it was made, but it was made for too much. Like Gladiator II, this will be seen as a commercial success, but it's not. 

9. Companion–A reported $10mb for this sci-fi horror comedy. Great reviews means this one should have a long run at the box office. 

10. Paddington in Peru–$90mb? Sadly, three times is not the charm artistically for this once-perfect franchise. 

11. Sonic The Hedgehog 3–$120mb 

12. Babygirl–$20mb for this Nicole Kidman sexy drama about a powerful businesswoman finding her kink with a younger, dominating man...her intern, no less! No milk was harmed in the making of this movie. 

13. Flight Risk–$25mb for director Mel Gibson action film starring Mark Walhberg.

14. Heart Eyes–$18mb for a Valentine's Day-themed horror flick. 

15. The Brutalist–$10mb; Adrien Brody in this architect-as-hero period drama. 

16. Love Hurts–$18mb for action comedy starring Ke Huy Quan and Ariana DeBose. This is no way to follow-up winning an Oscar!

17. Legend of the Condor Heroes: The Gallants–No budget available. A wuxia martial arts period adventure film written and directed by the legendary Tsui Hark. It's based on part of the novel of the same name by Jin Yong. 

18. Conclave–a reported $20mb for this Vatican thriller means this is a hit. I do not see the point in putting it on PVOD and flooding the market with bootlegs while potentially harming box office. This is exactly the sort of film that can play and play in theaters. 

19. Wicked–$150mb for each part, so $300mb total plus beaucoup marketing. It's a big movie! And they're made almost all their money back from the Part One alone. 

20. Den of Thieves 2: Pantera–$40mb for Gerard Butler action flick. 

21. One of Them Days–$14mb. It's always good to gross your budget during a film's opening week. So yea for producer Issa Rae and this comedy starring Keke Palmer and SZA. (What an opening week for SZA! Her movie opened well and she made my list of The 250 Best Albums of the 21st Century...So Far.)

22. Wolf Man–$25mb 

23. Becoming Led Zeppelin–Long-gestating doc breaks into the Top 10 on opening weekend, playing on IMAX  screens only. 

24. Moana 2–Is the budget lower since it was intended for tv, at first? Or higher because they had to rethink everything? Disney says it cost $150mb, just like the original. You can bet Dwayne Johnson gets more than his share of coconuts, but that won't matter with a hit like this.  

25. Hitman2–Korean action comedy. The creator of a webtoon series is derided for the quality of his latest season...until real-life terrorists seem to mirror his storyline and he's suddenly under suspicion by the government. The original film grossed $18m. 

26. Secret: Untold Melody–SK drama remake of a Taiwanese weepie about a pianist whose career is cut short by tragedy...but he finds comfort from a time-traveling woman. 

27. September 5–No reported budget. 

28. Gladiator II–$250mb for Ridley Scott sword and sandals epic. It needed $750m worldwide for me to call it a hit from theatrical alone but $600m would be just fine. It's got swords. It's got sandals. Does it have legs? No, it does not. This is the sort of film that everyone thinks of as a hit, but actually didn't deliver. The talk of Gladiator 3 is nonsense. Maybe many years from now they'll use the name to launch a new franchise, but this is the end for now. 

29. Nosferatu–$50mb for Robert Eggers, acclaimed director of The Witch, The Lighthouse and The Northman. That had his biggest budget and was not a commercial success. I saw him as more of an arthouse guy. But backers stuck with him, gave him a big budget again and a starry cast for a remake of Nosferatu, which I guess is classier than remaking Dracula but still a hard sell. And on Christmas Day? That's counter-programming I was not behind. Happily, I was wrong and Eggers looks more like the next Peter Jackson/Guillermo Del Toro than a guy given big budgets too fast or for the wrong projects. Good for him.

30. I'm Still Here–this Brazilian Oscar contender has no reported budget. But it's almost certainly a success story commercially for director Walter Salles. However, it's been a hard one to track. Usually, the film's grosses have been less than $1m so it hasn't made my weekly chart. This week, the film expanded in North America and grossed $1m in that market alone. So far in North America it has made $2.6m. Worldwide? Well, Box Office Mojo claims its worldwide gross stands at $22m. Wow. Maybe it's been opening in markets all over the world but never quite at the same time and never hitting big enough numbers to be tracked by ComScore, which only reports on the Top 10 right now.  That seemed like a lot so I jumped to Wikipedia, where some fan links to a story written in Brazilian Portuguese and claims it's hit $99m worldwide. Ha! Uh, no. 

31. Better Man–$110mb!!! I just gasped when I saw the budget. Oh dear. I love the craziness of this movie. But that's a LOT of money for such a nutty idea. And forget the nutty idea. It's a musical biopic about an artist whose music I really like but has virtually no profile outside the UK. For heaven's sake, Queen is one of the biggest acts in the world and their biopic cost literally half of this one. Better Man would have been a big gamble at $30mb. 

32. Presence–$2mb for retired director Steven Soderbergh's first of two movies out in 2025. 

33. The Three Investigators: Carpathian Dog aka Die Drei ??? Und Der Karpatenhund–No reported budget.


THE CHART AND HOW IT IS COMPILED 


This column is a week by week tracking of box office around the world. It is compiled by pulling from every possible source: ComScore, Box Office Mojo, Variety, Hollywood Reporter, Deadline, charts for countries like China and India and South Korea, individual stories in trade or general interest newspapers, Wikipedia and anyone else discussing box office. 


ComScore Weekly Global Box Office Chart


The weekly charts contain the total gross for every movie in theaters around the world during the last seven days. If a movie opens on a Thursday, we include all the box office from Thursday through Sunday. If it opens on a Tuesday night, we cover all six days. If it opens on a Sunday (as some movies do in India or wherever, depending on holidays), then we include the box office for that one day. If a movie was released before the current week, we include the box office for all seven days. Why ignore the box office from Monday through Thursday, as most charts do when tallying the latest weekend and focusing on new releases? 


How do we arrive at this number? We take the total worldwide box office we have for a movie, subtract from it the previous week's total worldwide box office...and that's how much it made during the past seven days. Naturally, territories and movies sometimes fall through the cracks but we are as up to date as we can be, given our dependence on other outlets for the basic info. 


First, I list box office on every film we can from around the world. Any movie grossing at least US $1 million will be on here if we get info on it. Then I give some thoughts on the box office overall and individual films. That's followed by notes where I give info on each movie, with a focus on films not from Hollywood. So Despicable Me 4 you know. But a small Korean comedy or French drama? That I'll identify for you as best I can. 


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