The movie theater industry has been fighting for its life since the world went into lockdown, and for several years, the recovery felt frustratingly uneven. A good quarter here, a promising weekend there, but never the kind of sustained momentum that suggested the big screen was truly back.
Streaming services, production delays, labor strikes, and shifting viewing habits all conspired to keep the box office from finding its footing. The industry needed a year that proved people still wanted to go to the movies on a massive scale.
According to data shared by WSJ, the domestic box office through June 21 has reached $4.46 billion, well ahead of every comparable year-to-date figure stretching back through the pandemic era.
For context, the same period in 2025 produced $3.91 billion, and in the particularly rough year of 2021, the number sat at just $910 million. Even the strong pre-pandemic summer of 2023, supercharged by the Barbenheimer phenomenon, only reached $4.23 billion through the same point. The current year has already surpassed that.
What makes the current surge compelling is that it is not being carried by a single franchise event. Seven different movie titles in the past three months have each delivered domestic opening weekends greater than $75 million, including ‘Project Hail Mary’, ‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’, ‘Michael’, ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’, ‘Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu’, ‘Backrooms’, and most recently ‘Toy Story 5’.
Amazon MGM found a genuine blockbuster hit with ‘Project Hail Mary’, with Ryan Gosling’s science fiction film grossing over $682 million globally after launching with an $80.5 million domestic opening. Alongside it, Lionsgate’s Michael Jackson biopic ‘Michael’ became a cultural phenomenon with legs that defied expectations. After opening to a record $97.2 million, ‘Michael’ has gone on to earn close to $960 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing musician biopic of all time.
The latest milestone arrived just this past weekend. ‘Toy Story 5’ opened to $160 million domestically from 4,425 theaters, securing the biggest domestic debut of the year and the largest opening weekend in the ‘Toy Story’ franchise’s history, not adjusted for inflation. Globally, the film debuted to $312 million, continuing a summer that has already generated genuine momentum for theater chains.
The total box office for the year currently stands at $4.47 billion, with the Wall Street Journal confirming this represents the best box office numbers since before the pandemic. AMC Entertainment CEO Adam Aron pointed to something meaningful about the year, noting in a statement that it is not just one film driving results week after week, but audiences turning up for a wide range of titles including films that have been in theaters for several weeks.
Crucially, the summer is not over, and some of the biggest films of the year have not yet opened. Major upcoming releases still to come include a live-action ‘Moana’ remake, Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’, the ‘Despicable Me’ spin-off ‘Minions and Monsters’, and ‘Spider-Man: Brand New Day’, with some analysts projecting the overall year could pass the elusive $10 billion domestic threshold.
Analysts do caution that the box office is unlikely to fully return to pre-pandemic highs as streaming continues to reshape viewing habits, but the fact that original titles like ‘Project Hail Mary’ and breakout horror films are thriving alongside franchise sequels signals a healthier and more diverse marketplace than the industry has seen in years. After nearly half a decade of uncertainty, Hollywood finally has the kind of story it has been desperate to tell.
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