The 2025 box office faces mounting pressure after the summer season closed below the $4 billion benchmark. Three upcoming sequels now carry the weight of reviving theatrical momentum as studios look to end the year on a stronger note.
Avatar 3 and two more sequels are 2025’s last hope at box office
The 2025 summer box office closed at $3.67 billion, nearly even with last year’s $3.677 billion, according to Comscore.
May posted a 76% year-over-year increase, but June, July, and August declined, totaling $2.68 billion, down 13% from 2024. Since 2012, a $4 billion May–Labor Day benchmark was considered standard, but 2025 fell short, joining 2017, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2024 as years that missed the mark (via Deadline).
Warner Bros.’ Weapons led Labor Day with $12.4 million over four days, bringing its domestic total to $134.6 million. Universal’s 50th anniversary re-release of Jaws followed with $9.8 million, while Sony’s Caught Stealing opened at $9.5 million.
Disney’s Freakier Friday earned $8.3 million in its fourth weekend, and Searchlight’s The Roses debuted with $8 million. The summer tally, rounded at $3.64 billion, is 1% lower than last year’s $3.67 billion.
Through August 30, 2025, the domestic box office reached $5.99 billion, 4% ahead of the same point in 2024. However, without a September tentpole like 2024’s Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, industry analysts expect the lead to diminish. Before the pandemic, $4 billion summers were routine, underscoring the pressure for year-end releases to deliver major results.
Three films stand as 2025’s strongest contenders: Avatar: Fire and Ash, Zootopia 2, and Wicked: For Good. James Cameron’s Avatar franchise set records, with the 2009 original earning $2.9 billion and its 2022 sequel, The Way of Water, grossing $2.3 billion. If Fire and Ash reaches similar numbers, 2025 will mark the first year with two $2 billion releases, joining Ne Zha 2, which has already surpassed $2.15 billion worldwide.
Disney positions Zootopia 2 to follow the billion-dollar success of its 2016 predecessor, while Wicked: For Good builds momentum from last year’s $700 million performance of Wicked Part One. These releases aim to deliver the final boost to 2025’s theatrical market.
Originally reported by Anubhav Chaudhry on SuperHeroHype.
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