Box Office Round Up Autumn Winter Box Office 2025-2026

We are beginning a new type of article here on the website dedicated to talking about the global box office. This was spurned on by the fact that very often you see confused, or outrightly false box office reporting so we wanted to try and provide some clarity. We operate on the idea that film profitability is the industry standard model of 2.5x the budget of the film, this then accounts for marketing and the cut of ticket sales between studios and cinemas in the domestic US market and the international market.

We have been keeping a running total of most of the major films that released between Autumn, that’s fall for our American friends, and Winter. As we are now in the spring/summer box office window we thought it was a good time to reflect over the findings.

Broadly we sort this into the good, the middling, the bad,  and the worrying.

The good

Horror is doing well across the board from films like Scream 7, Five Nights at Freddy’s 2, Good Boy or the Conjuring 4. Lots of horror films are making a good return on investment at the box office this is mainly due to the fact that they often have low budgets but also that there is a steady audience for them. Slasher horror seems to be a mixed bag with Scream 7 doing well but with The Strangers Chapter 3 and Silent Night not doing well. This could be down to franchise fatigue with The Strangers and limited marketing for Silent Night. More out there art house horror like 28 Years Later the Bone Temple are also struggling however, this again could be a marketing issue, as well as a response to the polarising nature of Years Later. Ovebudgeted horror like the Bride and Send Help is failing as well. Budgets need to come down across the board.

Anime based projects like Demon Slayer and Chainsaw man are also connecting, this reflects anime becoming more mainstream. This trend looks set to continue and will likely lead to more and more big cinema chains to cater towards the anime towards going forward.

Blockbusters like Avatar 3, and Wicked 2 are still able to draw in a crowd, which is a healthy sign for the box office, however each brought in significantly less than their predecessor, which is a worrying sign of things to come.

Romance films and films more targeted towards the female demographic specifically with things like Regretting You and The Housemaid are doing well, which shows that there might yet be life for the romance, rom com genre in Hollywood after a long absence.

The middling

This  is mainly the domain of kids films, you had highs with Zootopia 2, Gabby’s Dollhouse and SpongeBob, however, it seems to be very much a crap shoot in that not everything is connecting, the family market is seeming to be quite fickle.  Films like Hoopers and Goat show that original animation need lower budgets and need to be timed well in terms of release windows. Hoppers is a massive self-inforced error for Pixar it was made for too much and it came out far too close to Mario 2. Likewise Looney Tunes the Day The Earth Blew Up shows that not all films aimed at kids do well, and that time period of release plays a factor. By that we mean the fact of how Gabby’s, SpongeBob and Zootopia are all either recent or have ongoing films/TV shows whereas Looney Tunes is somewhat dated by comparison.

The Bad

Franchises are no longer safe. Whilst there was always some risk with franchise films in most cases they were seen as lower risk, however Tron, Predator,  and even smaller film franchises like Sisu all lost money on sequels. This suggests a need to actually think is this sequel needed, at the production level, as increasingly audiences can smell a bad sequel a mile away and aren’t coming. Franchise re-evaluation is needed and a fair few franchises need to be shelved, the recent cancellation of the Buffy reboot is an example of this.

Arthouse cinema and prestige films are increasingly being over budgeted, mostly due to being star vehicles and then are flopping over and over again. With examples such as the Smashing Machine, One Battle After Another and the Testaments of Ann Lee. Art House cinema has gained more and more ground over the last decade, outside of just the cinephile crowd, however the appetite for these sort of films has been overestimated. You can see the shift with this with films like The Devil Wears Prada 2 coming out and returning audiences to mindless escapism rather than meaningful films that say something. When reasonably budgeted art films can still break through such as Marty Supreme and Hamnet however, this is a losing game.

Original films more broadly are in trouble, almost all of the films that broke even during the period were either franchise films, or films based on something be that a book, a comic, a videogame etc. Original film such as the Bride are being over budgeted, or other films such as Mercy or Fackham Hall aren’t getting the attention they need in the marketplace. In some cases more original films will almost certainly move to streaming. Sadly a likely pipeline for the future will look like this, an original film releases on streaming it does well sequel in the cinema see K-Pop Demon Hunters.

The worrying

Attendance is down across the board when compared to pre pandemic we are starting to see an increase in business on last year, however this year we are bringing more to bare than last year so you would expect it.

Films that are doing well are doing a lot less than they would have in previous years and the ceiling for what would be profit is dropping and dropping, which is okay if you lower budgets however this is not happening across the board yet. This will lead to problems going forward if not remedied.

If you enjoyed this article , then please head over to my Patreon to support me. All film reviews are free, with no early access, sponsorships, or content locked behind paywalls. If you value independent coverage of the entertainment industry, your support over there helps to keep it going. Become a member on Patreon below

patreon.com/AnotherMillennialReviewer

Or if you would rather send me a donation if Patreon isn’t for you then please find a link to my Ko-Fi donation page below

http://ko-fi.com/anothermillennialreviewer

Cinema Issues: The Oscar Fate Of Sinners

The film got 4/16 nominations, many of which were undeserved. Cinematography, original screenplay and best actor should not have been given to it. After the smear campaign against Timothy Chalamet the ground was being set for the upset and for Jordan’s win but he didn’t deserve it. Playing two characters which are the same as the character he plays in everything else doesn’t mean he deserves the award over people like Ethan Hawke. It was tokenism. They knew Sinners wouldn’t get best director or best picture so they needed to give it something big and so they did. It was an effort to stop the inevitable calls of racism. Too late.

People have already screamed racism as it didn’t win all the awards it was nominated for, no film has ever won that many, they are also calls for black people to boycott the Oscars now and only care about the NAACP awards, therefore creating segregation in the awards circuit. Also the NAACP awards literally gives away awards based on race, so it does away with even the slightest whiff of merit. Screaming racism as a film doesn’t win 16 Oscars just devalues what racism is and makes you look like a baby having a tantrum, racism is people being treated as lesser based on race, suffering violence based on race, have freedoms revoked based on race, not a film only winning 4 Oscars.

To return to awards that this film didn’t deserve let’s talk about best original screenplay. There was so little original about Sinners that as we said, the award should be given to Robert Rodriguez, the film in so many ways is a rip off of From Dusk Till Dawn, that to call it original is baffling. This sets a new low bar for original at the Oscars and has devalued it in the process.

The phrase give someone an inch and they take a mile comes to our writers minds, the Oscars tried to pander and tried to give into tokenism to avoid being called racist and avoid these calls for boycotts and yet despite doing this and damaging their credibility it happened anyway.

If you enjoyed this Cinema Issues article , then please head over to my Patreon to support me. All film reviews are free, with no early access, sponsorships, or content locked behind paywalls. If you value independent coverage of the entertainment industry, your support over there helps to keep it going. Become a member on Patreon below

patreon.com/AnotherMillennialReviewer

Or if you would rather send me a donation if Patreon isn’t for you then please find a link to my Ko-Fi donation page below

http://ko-fi.com/anothermillennialreviewer

Scream 7: Free Scream From Melissa Barrera

Summary: The franchise goes back to it’s roots and brings back Sidney, Neve Campbell.

So we’ll say this up front, a hell of a lot of the reviews aren’t talking about the film at all they are talking about politics. They don’t like that Melissa Barrera was fired for abhorrent political views and think trashing the film now will give her some retribution? Anyway, if they want to destroy their own credibility then fine, but for us it’s on with the show.

So for the most part this was an enjoyable film, it was good to see Sidney again, I would have liked slightly more Gale but it was still a cheer worthy moment when she came back, taking down the killer.

It would have been a better pay off if Stu was in fact the killer, even with the weird amnesia angle, as it stood it is a little underwhelming when they reveal who the killers are. However, it works in a meta sense if you think the fans are the killer, the fans’ demand for Sidney to come back etc.  If you think about it like that it still works. There is a good chance they may actually bring back Stu for Scream 8.

The teens weren’t given a whole lot to do, and were all distractingly old for teens, Isabel May specifically.  The ending that had her follow in her mother’s survivor footsteps was good, however, the relationship between her and Sidney was a bit wooden, there could have been more done to make that feel real and human.

Overall, fun and enjoyable with only a few minor issues.

4/5

Pros.

The focus on Sidney

The ending transformation of Tatum

Joel McHale stole the scenes he was in

Gale’s entrance

Cons.

The reveal is a little weak, but works in a meta sense.

Isabel May needs to be less wooden

If you enjoyed this review , then please head over to my Patreon to support me. All film reviews are free, with no early access, sponsorships, or content locked behind paywalls. If you value independent coverage of the entertainment industry, your support over there helps to keep it going. Become a member on Patreon below

patreon.com/AnotherMillennialReviewer

Or if you would rather send me a donation if Patreon isn’t for you then please find a link to my Ko-Fi donation page below

http://ko-fi.com/anothermillennialreviewer

Thunderbolts: The Future Of The MCU

 Summary

The New Avengers are formed.

So going into this film I expected it to be bad, I had heard things about the film I did not like beforehand and I thought it would be on the same level as Brave New World.

However, after watching it I found it to be quite a delightful film with a similar feel to the Guardians films. Would I say something so dumb as to say the MCU is back? No because one good film does not fix the countless other problems the franchises is currently facing.

A lot of the reviews mention mental health and how deep this film is, well for me this is mixed. One the one hand the way the film treats Bob/Sentries, Lewis Pullman, mental health with him having a split personality as a superhero was well done, as was the depiction of domestic abuse we see when we see his childhood it was much better done than in Moon Knight for example. However, on the other hand, the film is not all that deep in its commentary on mental health, as Yelena’s, Florence Pugh, journey of needing to atone for what she has done was never fully explored beyond just being a loneliness issue. Moreover, there is a sequence near the end of the film wherein the whole team goes into the Void, the evil form of Sentry’s mind, and we don’t explore the trauma of the other team members. I think it would have been worth the time to have looked into Walker’s, Wyatt Russell, trauma of losing his wife and kids a bit more as it would have helped round the character, but alas it was a missed opportunity.

Outside of mental health talk I think the film does a lot to balance the heroic and the goofy, with each character having both. Red Guardian, David Harbour, is often the comedic relief but the film also gives him a number of great fatherly speeches wherein you can see how much he cares about Yelena and he risks his life constantly to help her. Walker too has a number of heroic moments such as shielding the team from bullets during the Limo escape scene. This is important as the MCU wants you to hate Walker after the events of Falcon and the Winter Soldier but this film does a lot to show him as a hero and to show he is not a villain. If the film was being reductive and simply wanted to show a lot of the male characters as sad pathetic losers for you to laugh at, as some have said, then they would not give them moments like this.

I would argue that Pugh is probably the least served member of the cast as whilst she is the focal point of the film, she is not really centre focus, with that being Bob, Bucky, Sebastian Stan, and the broader ensemble. Whilst I liked the father daughter scenes with Pugh’s character I thought how the film depicted her depression just felt like a cliché and had little depth to it. The scenes in which they talk about her first test are similarly repetitive rather than really pushing anything forward. I wouldn’t say any of this was due to Pugh’s performance rather the material she has been given.

This film shames Brave New World in that it takes its empathy ending and actually does it well. So for those of you who don’t know at the ending of Brave New World Falcon, Anthony Mackie, talks down Red Hulk, Harrison Ford, and defeats him through empathy and by appealing to the side of him that loves his daughter. This was terrible and makes little sense in the film, whereas here it makes sense why they need to go into the Void to get Bob back, they cannot beat Sentry in a fight, they try and get beaten, the only way they can win is to go into Bob’s mind and help him with his trauma, narratively it makes sense and works.

My main criticism of the film would be Val, Julia Louis Dreyfus, who is playing a cartoonish villain. She is being impeached and yet she thinks sending all her mercenaries to fight each other and then destroying bases linked to her doesn’t make her look evil, then you have how she treats her assistant and uses people. For a film about nuance she is not given anyway. Also the Trump or perhaps Tulsi Gabbard comparisons are incredibly on the nose and irritating.

Overall, a good Marvel film that feels like something you would have got pre-Endgame. Whilst not perfect it is a welcome step in the right direction.

4/5

Pros.

The tone

How it deals with Bob and his personalities

The team and the team dynamics

How it sets up things for later in the MCU

Cons.

Walker and Yelena could have done with more depth

Val is a horrible character and really should be written off at the earliest opportunity

If you enjoyed this review, then please head over to my Patreon to support me, I offer personalized shoutouts, customised film recommendations to suit your personality and tastes, the ability for you to pick what I review next and full access to my Patreon exclusive game reviews. Check it out!

https://www.patreon.com/c/AnotherMillennialReviewer

Or if you would rather send me a donation if Patreon isn’t for you then please find a link to my donations page below

Help Support My Reviews