Tom Holland in Spider-Man No Way Home
Sony
In the last weekend of 2021 and the first weekend of 2022, Spider-Man: No Way Home (review) held firm with a $52.7 million weekend gross. That is a decent 37% below its $84 million second weekend, giving it a $609.8million 17-day cume. The Force Awakens dropped 39% on its third weekend, albeit after a 39% second-weekend hold (No Way Home dropped 68% in weekend two). Meanwhile, Last Jedi dropped 27% after a 67% second weekend drop while Rise of Skywalker dropped 59% in weekend two and 53% in weekend three.
In terms of “debut weekend to day 17” multipliers, it is dead even with The Last Jedi ($517 million/$220 million). That is encouraging, as Star Wars VIII earned 1.2x its respective day 17 total, which in this case would push Spider-Man 3 version 2.0 to $733 million domestic in the end. Legs like Rise of Skywalker (1.14x its respective 17-day total), Rogue One (1.25x) and Force Awakens (1.26x) would put Spider-Man: No Way Home between $697 million and $772 million domestic by the end.
Yes, $800 million domestic is still unlikely, but No Way Home won’t have to contend with early-January break-out Oscar contenders like The Revenant ($184 million domestic), La La Land ($151 million), Hidden Figures ($169 million) or 1917 ($159 million). Nor will it have to deal with Last Jedi‘s one-two punch of Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle and The Greatest Showman. Unless Scream pulls a miracle over MLK weekend, there’s nothing for Peter Parker to worry about until ironically Sony’s own Morbius on January 28.
Michael Keaton on the set of “Batman”. (Photo by Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images)
Corbis via Getty Images
It is past Incredibles 2 ($608 million in 2018) as the tenth-biggest unadjusted-for-inflation domestic earner, just under Star Wars: The Last Jedi ($620 million in 2017). Unless it crashes after the holidays, it’s looking to end up at least in fifth place on the all-timer’s list, behind only Black Panther ($700 million), Avatar ($760 million), Avengers: Endgame ($858 million) and Star Wars: The Force Awakens ($936 million). Ironically, Batman and Spider-Man ended their theatrical runs in the fifth spot in 1989 and 2002.
In terms of inflated-adjusted grosses, it has sold more tickets in North America than Batman ($251 million in 1989/$590 million adjusted), The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King ($378 million/$577 million) and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest ($424 million/$605 million). It’s at 53rd on the all-time inflated-adjusted list, and a cume at least above $700 million would put between The Dark Knight ($532 million/$697 million) and Thunderball ($65 million/$701 million) in 33rd place.
Among other Marvel/DC adaptations, its domestic cume is already ahead of everything save for Avengers ($623 million/$720 million adjusted), Avengers: Infinity War ($678 million), Black Panther ($700 million/$715 million adjusted) and Avengers: Endgame ($858 million/$892 million). Fun fact: If Spider-Man: No Way Home tops $715 million, it will have sold more tickets than any non-Avengers MCU movie in the same year where Eternals sold fewer tickets ($164 million) than any MCU movie ever.
Chadwick Boseman in ‘Black Panther’
Disney and Marvel
The Tom Holland/Zendaya flick has earned $1.37 billion worldwide. That puts it past the likes of The Last Jedi ($1.333 billion), Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part II ($1.34 billion) and Black Panther ($1.346 billion) to place 12th on the all-timer’s list. Among superhero flicks, it sits behind only the four official Avengers movies ($1.405 billion in 2015, $1.517 billion in 2012, $2.048 billion in 2018 and $2.8 billion in 2019), making Peter Parker officially… wait for it… Earth’s Mightiest Hero (“Fight as One” blares as everyone head-bangs accordingly).
It was because of the 71% upswing in China for Avengers 4 (from $356 million for Infinity War to $620 million for Endgame) that the MCU epic temporarily passed Avatar as the biggest global grosser ever. And it was because of the 71% upswing from Spider-Man 1 version 3.0 (from $116 million for Homecoming to $199 million for Far from Home) that Spider-Man 2 version 3.0 passed Skyfall to become Sony’s biggest global grosser. Spider-Man: No Way is doing this without a penny from China.
It’s now certain to pass Frozen II ($1.45 billion) to become the biggest global grosser since The Lion King ($1.66 billion), with (very rough math) a final cume of around $1.55-$1.65 billion even if it never plays in the world’s biggest overseas market. After a year when Detective Chinatown 3, Hi Mom and The Battle at Lake Changjin gross between $690 million and $905 million just in China, it’s nice to be reminded that Hollywood should treat Chinese box office as a bonus rather than a necessity.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/scottmendelson/2022/01/02/box-office-spiderman-no-way-home-tops-black-panther-batman-last-jedi/