NerdyGeek's 2014 Comic Book Movie Box Office Predictions

NerdyGeek's 2014 Comic Book Movie Box Office Predictions

With 2013 about to come to a close, it's time to set up our 2014 calenders and look forward to the coming year, which will include several exciting new comic book movies. Come check out my box office predictions for these flicks and wager your bets for the year!

Editorial Opinion
By NerdyGeek - Dec 23, 2013 05:12 PM EST
Filed Under: Other

I think its safe to say that comic book movies are the dominant films in the market financially at the moment and while 2013 gave great credence to that claim, not every film was a smash hit. Kick-Ass 2 bombed hard with audiences and critics and despite great business overseas, The Wolverine was the lowest grossing X-Men film domestically. Iron Man 3, Man of Steel and Thor: The Dark World all did fantastic business though, so we can rest easy, right? It's hard to say how soon major fatigue will set in for these films as more and more are churned out each year and as more and more studios try to replicate Marvel's new team-up formula that allowed them to smash records.

2014 is a tricky year as it features mostly sequels to established franchises, but also is giving audiences new flavors of the genre with Guardians of the Galaxy. It's a good thing that these studios are learning how to market these flicks well now as each film has separated itself in tone, action and in some ways, thematic through-line; but will that be enough to keep superhero movies in great health for next year? We'll of course have to wait and see but if you're like me -- bored and just in need of something to waste the time -- check out my box-office predictions for 2014's CBMs and sound off below with your thoughts and predictions.



CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER -- April 4th
OPENING WEEKEND: $70-85 Million
DOMESTIC: $220 Million
WORLDWIDE: $575-600 Million

Excluding The Incredible Hulk, Captain America: The First Avenger was Marvel Studios' lowest grossing Phase One film. It's sequel, The Winter Soldier I feel will have far more accessibility to audiences with the new, more realistic tone and excellent marketing, which has been promoting some substance along with the fun action and comedy Marvel has now become known for. Opening weekend should match Thor 2 just like the first film did in 2011, but subsequent weeks should hold stronger due to Cap not facing Hunger Games-level competition. It's only real competition for the month of April will be 20th Century Fox's Rio 2 although it won't be too much of a juggernaut to severely hurt TWS. Some will argue Wally Pfister's Transcendence will be a challenge but with Johnny Depp's recent track record, I'm not seeing it. With only a $20M domestic increase in total, The Avengers bump was not nearly as strong for Thor: The Dark World as it was for Iron Man 3 in the US; but with less competition, The Winter Soldier has big potential to break out and hold strong for several weeks, before The Amazing Spider-Man 2 releases at least. As for international cume, this is where The Avengers effect seems to be strongest -- Thor: The Dark World had a 40% increase from its first film overseas -- so it won't come as a surprise when The Winter Soldier gains most of its worldwide haul from overseas, despite the "stigma" some will argue a character named Captain America will have on international audiences.



THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2 -- May 2nd
OPENING WEEKEND: $145 Million
DOMESTIC: $325 Million
WORLDWIDE: $830-900 Million

If you asked me to predict this film's box office back in August (the time I did my 2013 predictions), I would have definitely lowballed Marc Webb's Spidey sequel. This is because Sony's early marketing, which focused on just Electro didn't impress me too much. It just looked very run-of-the-mill with nothing new to it. Sony seemed to realize this and with the release of the first official theatrical trailer, The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is separating itself from the rest of the pack with a cavalcade of new villains set to appear, a focus on a greater Spider-Man universe and more crazy Spidey action for fans. The first film did not have goodwill going for it. Being a reboot to the hugely popular Tobey Maguire series of films didn't help it, making The Amazing Spider-Man the lowest grossing film domestically by a pretty wide margin, grossing $262M and being extremely front loaded, taking in $137M in its first five days. Thankfully, the sequel has a lot more going for it. It has the best spot of the Summer -- the first weekend in May -- which usually results in big (albeit front loaded) opening numbers. The film is also presenting new villains not yet seen on screen (mostly) and story -- no more origin story. It's first two weeks will be all to itself but will have to soon face Godzilla and the X-Men later in the month but if word of mouth is strong, it will be able to crack $300M. The question overseas is will Spidey be able to break the billion-mark for the first time? It's definitely going to make big bucks; the first film was the second highest-grossing overseas and a sequel boost can be expected for the same reasons I listed before, but one billion? It'll get close, but I'm thinking Sony will have to wait for film three for the big billion.



GODZILLA -- May 16th
OPENING WEEKEND: $50-65 Million
DOMESTIC: $160-180 Million
WORLDWIDE: $400-450 Million

After Pacific Rim being a failure domestically but being salvaged by international numbers, the future of the King of the Monsters in uncertain. Warner Bros. have been promoting the human-factor over Godzilla and have decided to tease the titular character so far, which is a smart move and has worked for building audience anticipation with films like Cloverfield. Key words are audience anticipation. Cloverfield had a strong $40M opening but ended up being extremely front loaded, with that opening making up 50% of its domestic gross -- receiving a "C" CinemaScore. The Bryan Cranston-starrer should open a bit higher than Cloverfield, due to brand recognition and 3D tickets. Godzilla is going to have to really deliver to keep audiences coming for weeks after release, especially as it will be facing X-Men: Days of Future Past and Disney's Maleficent. The best case scenario for Gareth Edwards' Godzilla domestically is probably 2011's Rise of the Planet of the Apes, which made $176M. To get these solid numbers though, it will need to hold strong, dropping only in high-40s, low-50s in subsequent weeks after release. It's no surprise that Godzilla will be big overseas, especially after how well Pacific Rim did in China, but will China (and Japan in this case) have to save Godzilla like it did with Guillermo Del Toro's monster flick? I don't think Godzilla is going to break out and it's best chance of success I feel will not light the house on fire due to a budget which is probably in the $175-200M range, excluding marketing costs. The elephant in the room here though is the 1998 Godzilla film, which made it's budget back and did solid business domestically, but was hated by fans and critics. Is there still a bad sting in people's mouth about that film? I guess we'll find out in May.



X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST -- May 23rd
OPENING WEEKEND: $85-95 Million
DOMESTIC: $250 Million
WORLDWIDE: $550-650 Million

It makes sense for Fox to place Days of Future Past in Memorial Day Weekend, they're expecting a big opening on the level of X3's $100M in the same slot 7 years ago. If you haven't been following the headlines, it's quite clear Fox are extremely confident in Bryan Singer's directorial return to the X-Men franchise. From it reportedly being Fox's most expensive film behind Avatar and setting a release date for the next film in the series months before release, it's quite clear Fox are wanting and expecting BIG things from this ambitious blockbuster. Merging actors from the first three X-films with the stars of the First Class film is a smart idea but how excited are audiences to see Ian McKellan and Patrick Stewart again? Well, if the reaction to their cameos in July's The Wolverine is anything to go by, quite a bit actually. But that still doesn't hide the fact that after six films, fatigue is setting in for this franchise, The Wolverine was the lowest grossing film domestically after all and that the last time the franchise cracked $200M was seven years ago. I'm hopeful for Days of Future Past though, it has a good chance in its first two weeks to be #1, despite the threat of Angelina Jolie's Maleficent on May 31st and Tom Cruise-starrer Edge of Tomorrow the week after; but if DOFP can open to $90M plus it can probably hold onto #1 given the track record of Jolie (who's highest-grossing opening was Kung Fu Panda 2 at $47M) and stay strong at either #2 or #3 the week after. Internationally, Days of Future Past is set for big numbers; The Wolverine was the highest grossing film overseas and again with the high-concept idea, the film could go as high as $400M. Maybe I'm overestimating but I do have goodwill in Bryan Singer. Yes, even after Jack the Giant Slayer and the mediocre Superman Returns, but goddamn X-Men 2 is good!



TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION -- June 27th
OPENING WEEKEND: $90 Million
DOMESTIC: $295-320 Million
WORLDWIDE: $1 Billion

I definitely think this franchise has reached its peak... domestically. Transformers: Age of Extinction is going to make it to $1 billion for one reason: China. Dark of the Moon is the second highest-grossing American film in the country and exclusive scenes will be shown in China ala Iron Man 3 so don't be surprised when the fourth film in the franchise makes the equivalent of $250 million in the country. Domestically, it might be a challenge for Age of Extinction to cross the $300M barrier, something which each film in the franchise before has done without trouble but will fatigue start to set in? I'm thinking so. While it will have its first two weeks to itself -- which includes July 4th weekend, following weeks it will take a backseat to Dawn of the Planet of the Apes and Hercules. There is a chance the film could surprise in the US and that fatigue won't set in, it does have Marky Mark and [frick]ing robot Dinosaurs after all.



DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES -- July 11th
OPENING WEEKEND: $70 Million
DOMESTIC: $175-185 Million
WORLDWIDE: $520 Million

Some could say I'm lowballing this one domestically, but due to competition, I'm thinking Dawn of the Planet of the Apes won't have as strong of a hold than the first film did but the sequel will have a stronger opening and that will get it to the first film's tally or slightly higher. With the advent of 3D this time, International numbers will be stronger for the Matt Reeves-directed sequel. Like the first film, the film will be probably have it all to itself for the first two weeks, unless you actually think the Wachowski's Jupiter Ascending will be any type of opponent but later weeks against the movies of the crowded August month will stop it from getting to $200M. Sorry Caesar.



GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY -- August 1st
OPENING WEEKEND: $60 Million
DOMESTIC: $160-180 Million
WORLDWIDE: $385-425 Million

The wild card of the Summer, possibly the year. James Gunn's Guardians of the Galaxy is bringing the zany, weirdness of the comic directly to the big screen with no holding back, but will audiences accept it? There are early reports that Marvel are trying to market the space-epic to the widest possible audience and have been working on a trailer for a while now. It's hard to judge the film based on 30 seconds of footage that leaked at Comic-Con, which included test reels and flashes of footage filmed in only fifteen days. A smart strategy would be to start the campaign at the Superbowl and then attaching a full-length trailer to Captain America: The Winter Soldier or The Amazing Spider-Man 2. For opening weekend, I'm looking at Thor, another zany comic book property brought to screen by Marvel Studios. In subsequent weeks it will face Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles -- a film pushed back so many times by Paramount it's like they don't even want to release it -- The Expendables 3 and Sin City: A Dame To Kill For. The former may be running out of steam or could have its last hurrah and the latter I don't see gathering much general audience attention, just from fans of the first film. Aganist all these films, I'm seeing a hold similar to Thor. International is a huge market for Marvel and I see Guardians doing very well over there, it may very well dominate the month overseas and make far more than I estimated. If Marvel can make this crazy concept of characters succeed with talking trees and SMG-wielding raccoons, they truly will be the kings of the comic book genre.


There you go, seven films for 2014. Let me know your thoughts and give me your own predictions in the comments below. Happy Holidays and a happy new year!

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NerdyGeek
NerdyGeek - 12/23/2013, 5:22 PM
niklander: The only people who will say "The King of the Monsters" are nerds. He's a pop-icon but one not taken the same way this new film is trying to portray. It also has only one week to make big bucks and then DOFP and more will destroy it.

Also, if people got so sick of blockbusters in July, why was Despicable Me 2 the second highest grossing movie of the year? The only reason for Pacific Rim being a domestic failure (and failure in most places besides China) was terrible marketing.
JamesMan
JamesMan - 12/23/2013, 5:24 PM
@niklander

You're forgetting Iron Man 3 in that list ;D

I think Godzilla's BO is lowballing it but we'll see. X-Men: Days of Future Past's numbers seem a tad to high based off the rest of the franchises intake. Guardians of the Galaxy seems WAY to high for me, maybe $350 million but that's still pushing it. Again, we will see.
Moohika
Moohika - 12/23/2013, 5:30 PM
I think you're pretty dead on.
staypuffed
staypuffed - 12/23/2013, 5:32 PM
I agree with your predictions, good job!
Priest
Priest - 12/23/2013, 5:35 PM
I have a feeling that Guardians of the Galaxy is going to make much more than that. I think it's going to be a highly successful blockbuster. It will be well received by critics and considered to be a fun movie for the family. It will be marketed as a comic book movie, but not about superheroes, more like a fun sci-fi adventure.
AmazingFantasy
AmazingFantasy - 12/23/2013, 5:38 PM
pretty much
TheOneAboveAll
TheOneAboveAll - 12/23/2013, 5:38 PM
I feel that Guardians of the Galaxy is going to heavily be overlooked next year and would predict it to only make around the 350 million range.
TheOneAboveAll
TheOneAboveAll - 12/23/2013, 5:39 PM
@AL
isn't Cap most people's least favorite Avenger? Even Hawkeye is loved more than Cap
FilmsFan
FilmsFan - 12/23/2013, 5:40 PM
I just don't agree with Captain America & GOTG numbers!

Marvel films without Tony Stark hasn't been able to crack 200 million$ in US, Thor2 is barely over that!
So I can't imagine Cap2 beating Thor2!
Unless it's Dark Knight level great... Which I seriously doubt as I believe; MARVEL as Company & JJ Abrams as Director only makes GOOD films; never Great films, that people will remember for rest of their lives! (U can argue on Avengers, but I won't)

I see CAP2 doing 180ish even if it's great cuz it's just not coming in the Blockbuster film season!
& I'll be shocked if GOTG did even 150!
If Conjuring 2 opened against it (hypothetically)... it'll beat GOTG in opening weekend & final gross... Same goes for ANT MAN, with the level or success or the lack of, for Edger Wright, I'll find it hard to believe that it'll do any more than 125-140 in US!
Given new films will open against them & fatigue is catching up & well, THOR, CAP, GOTG & ANTMAN, can't even match Supes, how will they stack up when other like ....all united X-MEN, SPIDEY & BATMAN/SUPERMAN & WW ... Be on peoples mind as priority films & dozens more!
Nick56
Nick56 - 12/23/2013, 5:43 PM
GOTG may not flop but its certainly not going to make those numbers.
BenjiWest
BenjiWest - 12/23/2013, 5:45 PM
Cap is definitely not getting to that. Godzilla will tank.
Supes17
Supes17 - 12/23/2013, 5:46 PM
Godzilla's box office intake will depend on the reviews
MercwithMouth
MercwithMouth - 12/23/2013, 5:47 PM
I think you're low on GotG and Cap. But that's my opinion. Good right up man.
cipher
cipher - 12/23/2013, 5:49 PM
Heh, I'd give my predictions, but, ah.. yeah, I'm rubbish at this. Good to see ya around, by the way. Lotta guys have come an' gone over the last year, so it's good to see you've still got a pulse, Nerdy.

Take care, mate. Do plenty o' drinkin' this Christmas.

;D
Neek2086
Neek2086 - 12/23/2013, 5:50 PM
Pretty decent predictions.. I think it all depends on the marketing.. And whoever has that first week in May and is a well known property will most likely do high numbers.
Spideyshawn
Spideyshawn - 12/23/2013, 5:50 PM
Spot on dofp will have a higher opening but only time will tell.
NerdyGeek
NerdyGeek - 12/23/2013, 5:54 PM
Thanks cipher, have a great Christmas yourself and a better new year.

Just... try not to repeat last year.





:)
ALegendaryPanda
ALegendaryPanda - 12/23/2013, 5:57 PM
Godzilla will make a little bit more than that I think but other than that these predictions are pretty good!
Enphlieuwince
Enphlieuwince - 12/23/2013, 5:59 PM
@FilmsFan



I haven't seen a low ball like that since the dog stopped running his ass across the floor.
JGAR
JGAR - 12/23/2013, 6:05 PM
Pretty low for Godzilla and Guardians, @BenjiWest how will it tank? The trailer alone is also better than any marketing of Pacific Rim.
ALegendaryPanda
ALegendaryPanda - 12/23/2013, 6:07 PM
Godzilla will NOT flop. You'd be insane to believe that.
NerdyGeek
NerdyGeek - 12/23/2013, 6:09 PM
Jobin: "WHY IS THIS ON MAIN" Slow news day.
"WHO THE HELL ARE YOU" Somebody who has been on this site far longer than you.
"what are you basing your predictions on?" I don't know, I just picked random numbers.
"You are wasting internet space with this article." So is your comment.
JGAR
JGAR - 12/23/2013, 6:11 PM
@MrFridayNight

How will it flop? Explain.
Reviewscrub72
Reviewscrub72 - 12/23/2013, 6:11 PM
ya fvckin right cap 2 and GOTG is gonna make way more these predictions are always off
imaginejim
imaginejim - 12/23/2013, 6:12 PM
You forgot (or purposely omitted) I, Frankenstein / 300 2 / Sin City 2....
JGAR
JGAR - 12/23/2013, 6:13 PM
And IMO, the budget for Godzilla is $160m, I'm not saying it will light down the house on fire but fixing that.
NerdyGeek
NerdyGeek - 12/23/2013, 6:14 PM
imaginejim: I forgot... because I'm just SO EXCITED for those movies.
brazilianbatman
brazilianbatman - 12/23/2013, 6:17 PM
all the predictions makes sense. I think the xmen could go higher. I wouldn't be surprised if days of a future past make a billion even though the highest grossing movie of the franchise(xmen 3) didn't pass half a billion.
jcfrommars9
jcfrommars9 - 12/23/2013, 6:17 PM
@FilmsFan

Marvel films without Tony Stark hasn't been able to crack 200 million$ in US, Thor2 is barely over that!

Which means that a Marvel film without Tony Stark has cracked $200 million. And this one, mind you, did it in the fall.

Given new films will open against them & fatigue is catching up & well, THOR, CAP, GOTG & ANTMAN, can't even match Supes

As NerdyGeeks's projections showed, they won't need to match Supes. Furthermore, none of those films did or are going to have a $225 million production budget, open to more than 4,000 theaters and/or going to be released in every format. Thor: The Dark World was released in the fall, opened to less than 4000 theaters, had a production budget $55 million smaller and in less formats and it's behind Man of Steel by $35, $36 million?
marvel72
marvel72 - 12/23/2013, 6:33 PM
the amazing spider-man 2 highest grossing comic book movie of 2014.

captain america the winter soldier the best received critically.
DaVinci31
DaVinci31 - 12/23/2013, 6:34 PM
@DukeNukem

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