
On this month’s Global Box Office Tracker (GBOT, above), the stacked bar graph on the left shows total box office levels split out by the three key global markets: Domestic, China, and International (excluding China). The pie chart indicates the current deficit compared to the average of the three pre-pandemic years (2017-2019) and where those losses are currently coming from. The bar graph on the bottom right displays the percentage drops globally.
After eight months, the total Global box office is estimated to have reached $22.9 billion for 2025. That is +5% above the same period last year and -8% below the one in 2023. The Global cume is down -17% (or $4.8 billion) from the pre-pandemic three-year average. That has narrowed a bit from a peak of -20% at the end of April.
In China, three local releases with a combined box office of nearly $600 million ruled August. The war drama DEAD TO RIGHTS, which opened at the end of July, led the trio, adding $276 million in August for a cume of $404 million at the end of the month. That also made DEAD TO RIGHTS the highest-grossing title globally in August. It was supported by animated hit NOBODY ($200m) and Jackie Chan action movie THE SHADOW’S EDGE ($122m).
Consequently, August was the 3rd highest-grossing month in China of the past 12, with a total of $834 million. Only behind the CNY months, January (-6%) and February (-63%). This is the second-highest August result of the past five years, just behind the record year 2023 (-23%). As August is historically the second-highest-grossing month of the year, the gap to the pre-pandemic average was still -16%.
The very good result in August was not enough to avoid the Chinese year-to-date gap from the three-year average further widening from -5% to -7% within the month. A long way down from the peak of +72% at the end of February. China now has just the fourth-best value of the tracked Top 20 major markets after leading globally for the first five months of the year.
For Hollywood titles in August, the Global box office was led by Warner Bros’ horror hit WEAPONS, which grossed $232 million. This was backed up by Disney’s MCU holdover THE FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST STEPS, adding $216 million for a cume of $505 million at the end of the month, and Universal’s animated THE BAD GUYS 2, taking $167 million in August.
Following them was Japan’s DEMON SLAYER: INFINITY CASTLE, which added $98 million in Japan and close to another $50 million from its August roll-out in other markets.
The Domestic market had a mixed August. It achieved $715 million. On one hand, this is just -10% below the three-year average; the fifth best of the past 12 months. On the other hand, it was -22% behind the strong August of last year and -15% below the one of 2023. For the first time since March, no title achieved more than $200 million within the month. The highest-grossing title in August was WEAPONS with $133 million.
That is marginally above last year’s August release IT ENDS WITH US ($131m), which ranked number two back then. In the past two years, the strong holdover of late July releases dominated August. Last year, DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE grossed $313 million, and the prior year’s BARBIE got to $232 million. This year, the late July holdover THE FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST STEPS just got to $106 million within August.
At the end of August, the Domestic cume for the running year is at $6.0 billion. That is +4% above last year at the same time and -10% below the period in 2023. August was strong enough to narrow the gap to the three-year average slightly from -25% at the beginning of the month to -24% now.
Outlook
Summer’s gone and Autumn’s to come. From a global perspective, the current cumulative box office is between the past two years at the same point in time. September tends to be the lowest-grossing global month of the year. A usual calm month to take a breath between the hot summer that went by and the busy Q4 to come. This year, September most likely won’t break records again, but it offers a solid slate with a chance of surprises.
Anime phenomenon DEMON SLAYER: INFINITY CASTLE will roll out outside of Asia, and the massive horror franchise THE CONJURING will release its final chapter. The Jordan Peele-produced HIM is another promising original horror title, especially for the Domestic market. Catering to the female demographic, Margot Robbie is back on theatrical screens for the first time since BARBIE with A BIG BOLD BEAUTIFUL JOURNEY.
Meanwhilel, DOWNTON ABBEY will get its grand finale, pre-school franchise GABBY’S DOLLHOUSE will see its theatrical debut, and closing the month is the first collaboration between Leonardo DiCaprio and prestige director Paul Thomas Anderson: ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER.Information For Professionals In Exhibition, Film And Entertainment
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