Paul Dergarabedian, a box office analyst for Comscore, told Forbes that 2025 could be the best year for movies since the industry was rocked by the Covid-19 pandemic and the Hollywood labor strikes of 2023. Though this year's box office is performing better than 2024, it is still behind the 2019 box office by about 26%, according to Comscore data. Dergarabedian said the first quarter of 2025 was slightly underwhelming because of the lack of blockbusters released in December that could have carried over into this year. He said the box office has had built up momentum since April, when "A Minecraft Movie" overwhelmingly beat box office expectations and "Sinners" became a word-of-mouth hit, which he noted is an original movie not connected to an existing franchise, unlike most other box office hits this year. Dergarabedian said the second half of the year is stacked with potential blockbusters, including "Jurassic World Rebirth," "Superman" and "Avatar: Fire and Ash."
"Sunrise on the Reaping," a prequel novel to the "Hunger Games" book series written by Collins, has had a film adaptation in development since before the book was released. Film studio Lionsgate has already been working to build hype for the film, slated to release in 2026, by revealing the cast one at a time in social media posts since April. Australian actor Joseph Zada stars as a younger version of Haymitch Abernathy, the protagonist of "Sunrise on the Reaping" who participates in the 50th Hunger Games. Other cast members include Elle Fanning as a younger Effie Trinket, Ralph Fiennes as President Snow and Kieran Culkin as Caesar Flickerman.
The Chinese film "Ne Zha 2" became one of the highest-grossing movies of all time this year -- with little help from the United States. The animated film is a sequel to "Ne Zha," a box office hit released in 2019, and its main character is based on the Chinese mythological character Nezha. "Ne Zha 2" became an immediate smash hit in China upon release in January, and about a month later, took the crown from "Inside Out 2" as the highest-grossing animated film of all time. Only about $20 million of "Ne Zha 2"'s total gross is from U.S. theaters, according to Box Office Mojo, which lists "Ne Zha 2" as the eighth highest-grossing film of all time. Much of its gross comes from Chinese theaters, and multiple outlets reported more than 300 million tickets have been sold in China, a staggering total equaling about one-fifth of China's population. The film was helped with its release coinciding with the Lunar New Year period, when people had time off from work, and China's effort to build more movie theaters, Deadline reported, adding that support for the film became a source of national pride. Government subsidies helped fund about $80 million in movie tickets, Deadline reported, adding some companies gave employees the day off to go see the movie. The film's basis on a traditional Chinese story and its appeal to all generations helped the film connect with audiences, Chinese film critic Raymond Zhou told the New York Times. The success of "Ne Zha 2" comes as Chinese interest in Hollywood films wanes, with only "Godzilla x Kong" ranking in the top 10 at the Chinese box office last year, CNBC reported.