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High-flying superheroe­s fell flat in 2023, but will they regain their powers next year?

▶ Chris Newbould analyses DC and Marvel’s box office struggles and the challenges ahead

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In 1985, Tina Turner sang that “we don’t need another hero” on the soundtrack to the third instalment of cult dystopian sci-fi Mad Max. Four decades on, cinema audiences may be coming around to her point of view.

There’s been much talk of “superhero fatigue” over the course of 2023 as successive projects from both major players in the genre, Marvel and DC, limped from one unimpressi­ve box office haul to another.

In the Disney-owned Marvel camp in March, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a banked, in Marvel terms, a mere $476.1 million globally. While the sum may read as impressive, with a $200 million production budget, and marketing budgets often equalling production costs for flagpole releases, it would have been lucky to scrape into profit.

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is harder to quantify. It’s animated and non-MCUcanon – part of the affiliated Sony Spider-Man Universe. Its $683 million June release is no small change, but it’s only around a third of the near-$2 billion banked in December 2021 by Spider-Man: No Way Home, the last live-action Spider-Man outing.

It’s not been an entirely disastrous year for Marvel. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol

3, a relatively niche Marvel property, achieved a solid $845 million haul in May.

But then we come to last month’s opening for The Marvels. Its $46 million domestic launch weekend was the worst in the history of the MCU and it has since gone on to take $199 million globally. The direction of travel seems indisputab­le.

Things have been no better over at arch-rival DC. The Flash pulled in $270.6 million worldwide in June, but with a production budget of about $220 million, the film is tipped to be one of the biggest box office flops of all time, losing parent company Warner Bros about $200 million. August’s Blue Beetle made only $129 million globally, while in March, Shazam! Fury of the Gods made $133.8 million.

There was a time, in the 2010s, when the genre appeared to be a money-printing machine for studios. Avengers: Endgame is the most obvious example, displacing Avatar as the highest-grossing film to date, with a $2.8 billion haul in 2019. But it’s not alone. Revenue tracker Box Office Mojo’s all-time list of top-grossing films features no fewer than four MCU entries in the top 10.

Even less well-known Marvel characters such as Captain Marvel and Iron Man – who was a fringe member of the team before his cinematic renaissanc­e – have all passed $1 billion at the box office.

At DC, historical­ly the runner up in the Marvel vs DC big-screen battle, Aquaman, Joker and the last two films in Christophe­r Nolan’s Batman trilogy also find themselves in the billion-dollar-club.

It’s a club both studios would have dearly loved to join in 2023, a year when the undisputed movie event of the year was the summer box office showdown between a threehour historical epic about the invention of the atom bomb and a surreal feminist comedy from an acclaimed indie director about a doll launched in the 1950s. It’s hard to think of two films further removed from the superhero genre.

The Hollywood strikes have played their part in hampering release schedules and publicity over the course of the year, but both Barbie and Oppenheime­r were affected and still banked impressive­ly – just above and just below $1 billion, respective­ly.

The year’s other big earner, The Super Mario Bros Movie, suggests we might look to Hamleys rather than comic books for the next big hit.

Saturation is likely to have played a part in the downfall of superheroe­s. Disney in particular has tended to see Marvel as a means of driving subscriber­s to streaming service Disney+ since global roll-out began in 2020.

For the first couple of years, marked by lockdowns and cinema restrictio­ns, the service made little effect on box office sales, and viewers were probably just pleased to have new content while stuck indoors.

Enter 2023, however, with lockdown a fading memory. Marvel has launched no less than four series on Disney+, with a fifth, What If…?, to come tomorrow. Four movies have also been released in cinemas.

That is significan­tly fewer releases than initially planned, with Mahershala Ali’s coming Blade reboot perhaps the highest profile postponeme­nt. The delay could be a sign that Disney itself has spotted the effects of oversupply? With almost one new Marvel project a month for fans to take in, and some of the TV shows requiring a 10-hour-plus viewing commitment, it’s certainly a lot to expect of fans.

DC parent Warner Bros Discovery is a little behind Disney on the streaming front. Its Max service, despite various forerunner­s, launched in the US in May following the merger of the two entertainm­ent giants, and global roll-out is continuing.

There’s plenty of new DC content coming in cinemas and on Max, including the much-anticipate­d The Penguin series, but Warner Bros has also shown a significan­t amount of its DC content on Amazon Prime, including past DC Extended Universe movies.

This could partly be a reaction to observing its rival’s saturation and probably also an attempt to clear the slate before DC chief executive James Gunn’s reboot of the entire universe from next year.

There’s been a notable drive by both Marvel and DC to focus on less well-known characters in 2023, too. Characters such as The Marvels, Ant-Man, Shazam and Blue Beetle all sit towards the low-profile end of their respective publishers’ comic book output, which may not have helped sell tickets.

We won’t have to wait long to find out if the return of some much-loved characters can heal the apparent malaise afflicting the genre. DC is first out of the blocks, with Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom landing in cinemas today. The first Aquaman film is the highest-grossing DC movie to date. A sequel to the Oscar-winning Joker is due next October.

Marvel’s next 12 months on the big screen are more muted, partly due to postponeme­nts and partly because the Avengers’ planned Kang-dominated multiverse is in limbo following the firing of actor Jonathan Majors, who plays the supervilla­in Kang.

On Monday, Majors was convicted of assaulting his former partner, Grace Jabbari.

The only MCU movie scheduled next year is Deadpool 3 – the first Deadpool film within the official MCU, following Disney’s 2019 takeover of 20th Century Fox.

There’s a lot riding on the film’s planned July release, but if Ryan Reynolds can’t save your franchise, it may be past saving anyway.

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AP; Disney Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3
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The Super Mario Bros Movie
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The Marvels
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Joker

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