
New 'Superman' muscles to $217 million at global box office
The movie that introduces David Corenswet as the Man of Steel added $95 million in international markets for global ticket sales expected to reach $217 million through Sunday, Warner Bros said.
Superman is a reboot of the movie franchise based on the hero who debuted in comic books in 1938. The film's performance is critical to the future of Warner Bros and its DC Studios division.
Despite a stable of iconic characters, including Batman and Wonder Woman, DC has not been able to match the box office power of Walt Disney's Marvel superhero films.
The new Superman was written and directed by James Gunn, the filmmaker known for three offbeat Guardians of the Galaxy movies for Marvel. Gunn was tapped as co-CEO of DC Studios in 2022, alongside producer Peter Safran, and billed as the hero who could bring consistent success to its film and TV projects.
Superman is one of only three films to debut with more than $100 million in domestic ticket sales in 2025 as moviegoing lingers below pre-pandemic levels.
"The domestic number is great. You can't beat a top three opening of the year," Jeff Bock, senior box office analyst at Exhibitor Relations Co, said of the Superman results.
He called the international ticket sales "troubling" for a big-budget action movie. The film cost $225 million to make, according to a source with knowledge of the budget.
Jeff Goldstein, president of global distribution at Warner Bros., said the studio was thrilled with the domestic response and that the movie about an American icon performed as expected overseas.
"We always knew that this would be bigger in the U.S. than international," Goldstein said. " Superman has always been very American-centric."
Gunn's take on the character earned positive reviews from critics. Nearly 82 per cent of reviews collected on the Rotten Tomatoes website gave the film a thumbs up.
Corenswet stars opposite The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel actor Rachel Brosnahan as journalist Lois Lane and Nicholas Hoult as villain Lex Luthor.
After box office misfires last year including Furiosa and Joker: Folie à Deux, Warner Bros has notched six No. 1 openings in 2025. The studio boasts this year's highest domestic opening with A Minecraft Movie, which pulled in $162.8 million over its first three days in April.
The studio also has delivered hits with Sinners, Final Destination Bloodlines and F1.
Superman is meant to set the stage for coming DC films, including a Supergirl movie next summer and future Batman and Wonder Woman films.
Some conservative commentators objected to Superman when Gunn said the movie about a refugee from another planet was an immigrant story. US President Donald Trump posted a meme that showed his face in place of Corenswet's on a Superman poster.
The director and stars said the film was a tale about kindness and no political message was intended.
"It's just a movie guys," actor Nathan Fillion, who plays Green Lantern, told Variety at the film's Los Angeles premiere.
Elsewhere over the weekend, Jurassic World Rebirth finished second on domestic charts with $40 million, according to Comscore estimates. F1 came in third, collecting $13 million.
Year-to-date ticket sales in the US and Canada hovered 15% above 2024 but 24% below the pre-Covid times of 2019.
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