
Movies in 2024: Lessons from a turbulent year at the box office
Movie ticket sales took a bit of a hit in 2024. The annual domestic box office is expected to end up at around $8.75 billion, down more than 3% from 2023, according to estimates from Comscore.
Itβs not as dire as it was in the pandemic years, but itβs also not even close to the pre-pandemic norm when the annual box office regularly surpassed $11 billion.
This is the year the business felt the effects of the Hollywood strikes of 2023, the labor standoff that delayed productions and releases and led to a depleted calendar for exhibitors and moviegoers. And yet itβs not as bad as it could have been, or at least as bad as analysts projected at the start of the year.
βThis has been a really incredible comeback story for the industry,β said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. βJust a couple of months ago it was a question of whether we would even hit $8 billion for the year.β
Hollywood continues to learn lessons about what moviegoers really want, what works and what doesnβt. Here are the biggest takeaways from 2024.

The strike fallout was real
The Hollywood strikes might have ended in 2023, putting productions back into full swing and sending stars out on the promotional circuit again β but the ripple effect of the work stoppages and contract standoffs showed their real effects on the 2024 release calendar.
The first two quarters were hit hardest, with tentpoles pushed later in the year (βDeadpool & Wolverine,β for one) or even into 2025 (like βMission: Impossible 8β). With no Marvel movie kicking off the summer moviegoing season, the box office was down a devastating 27.5% from 2023 right before βInside Out 2β opened in June.
βItβs an unpredictable business but it thrives on stability,β Dergarabedian said. βWhen the release calendar is thrown off, the momentum stops.β
The PG rating (and animation) ruled

Sequels and franchises dominated the top 10 movies of the year, as has often been the case in the past 15 years. But this year, films carrying a PG rating did especially well, starting with the biggest movie of 2024: βInside Out 2,” which also became the biggest animated movie of all time, not accounting for inflation.
Family films with a PG rating β including βDespicable Me 4,ββMoana 2,ββWicked,β βKung Fu Panda 4,β βSonic the Hedgehog 3,β βMufasaβ and βThe Wild Robotβ β grossed over $2.9 billion this year, accounting for around 33% of the annual box office, according to Comscore. Movies rated PG-13, by contrast, made up about 30% of ticket sales.
The Disney impact
After a quieter 2023 and several years without a film at the very top of the charts, the Walt Disney Co. came back roaring in 2024 with three of the top five movies of the year: “Inside Out 2,β βDeadpool & Wolverineβ and βMoana 2.β In mid-December, it crossed the $2 billion domestic mark, the second time any studio has done so since 2019 (that was also Disney, in 2022). Its 20th Century division also played an important part with βAlien: Romulusβ and βKingdom of the Planet of the Apes.β
βItβs a different industry when Disney commits to theatrical releases,β said Daniel Loria, an executive at the movie data and analytics trade The Boxoffice Company.

Looking at βflopsβ a different way
Every year has high-profile flops and disappointments, and this was no exception. Sony had a rough go with its βSpider-Manβ adjacent titles like βMadame Webβ and βKraven the Hunterβ (but this also seems to be the fate lately for anyone not named βDeadpoolβ). Universal had higher hopes for βThe Fall Guy,β as did Warner Bros. for βFuriosa: A Mad Max Sagaβ and βJoker: Folie Γ Deux.β
Then there were the filmmaker-driven (and financed) passion projects that failed to take off like Kevin Costnerβs βHorizon: An American Saga β Chapter 1β and Francis Ford Coppolaβs βMegalopolis.β
βItβs a reductive way of thinking about those passion projects,β Loria said. βThose movies didnβt come out with huge expectations, meaning theaters didnβt clear out the house and give them three auditoriums per site in hopes for money to come in.β
This was, however, part of the problem with βJoker 2,β which was expected to be more in line with the first which made over $1 billion. But even that has a caveat, Loria thinks.

βIt wasnβt just that βJokerβ didnβt perform, itβs that there was nothing coming in behind it to make up that momentum,β Loria said. βThatβs more the fault of a release schedule where one movie is supposed to carry a month. That model doesnβt work anymore.β
Audiences crave options and a diverse lineup
What does work, Loria said, is a diverse lineup, with the Thanksgiving and Christmas successes being the perfect example. At Thanksgiving, there was βWicked,β βGladiator IIβ and βMoana 2.β Christmas had βMufasa,β βSonic 3,β and a lot of adult offerings too, including βNosferatu,β βA Complete Unknownβ and βBabygirl.β
Horror is often the safest bet for theatrical, but this year had even veterans pleasantly surprised by just how enthusiastic that audience can be, with hits like βLonglegs,β βNosferatu,β βTerrifier 3β and βSmile 2β getting people out of the house.
The Blake Lively drama βIt Ends With Us,” which had its share of ongoing off-screen drama as well, also became an event. Audiences turned out for smart thrillers, like βConclaveβ as well as unexpected originals including βAnora,” βThe Substanceβ and βThe Brutalist.β
Nostalgia and the allure of a re-release
Re-releases of movies in theaters that are also widely available in the home thrived this year. Some of the biggest successes included Christopher Nolan’s βInterstellar,”βCoralineβ and βThe Phantom Menace.β
βIt just shows our industry once again that audiences truly understand the difference between a communal, big screen theatrical experience that they crave even on films that theyβve had the opportunities to see in the home,β Nolan said in December. βThat theatrical experience that we all know and love is so powerful and so exciting. Itβs a very clear demonstration of it.”
Viral marketing moments
As silly as it sounds, this is the year the novelty popcorn bucket became a star. It started with the accidentally suggestive βDune: Part 2β creation, which βDeadpool & Wolverineβ latched onto in a less accidental way. More recently, the βNosferatuβ coffin buckets have been fetching high resale prices.
For Loria, itβs all part of a trend that theaters have been noticing since reopening during the pandemic: Moviegoers arenβt back in pre-pandemic numbers, but those who did come back were spending more on concessions and premium tickets (like IMAX and other large format screens) than ever before.
2025 looks bright
Everyone is optimistic for the film business in 2025, and the offerings for moviegoers β which include at least 110 films projected to open on over 2,000 screens β according to the National Association of Theatre Owners. And the momentum is there.
βThere’s been a huge amount of box office generated in the last six weeks of the year,β Dergarabedian said. βThis is the best opening act 2025 could have.β
Join the Conversation!
Want to share your thoughts, add context, or connect with others in your community? Create a free account to comment on stories, ask questions, and join meaningful discussions on our new site.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.