Superman delivered the third-largest domestic opening of 2025 with $122 million, vaulting past long-range projections that dipped below $120 million as recently as mid-June. The strong U.S. turnout contrasts with a $95 million overseas haul that studio executives described as “expected but not explosive,” leaving the reboot’s global total at $217 million through Sunday.
Senior analyst Jeff Bock called the split “impressive at home, cautionary abroad,” noting that a $225 million budget demands steady holds in coming weekends if the film is to clear its break-even threshold.
Domestic momentum matters because recent DC entries—including Blue Beetle ($25 million start) and Shazam! Fury of the Gods ($30 million start)—fell well short of expectations, eroding exhibitor confidence in the brand.
Early audience polling for Superman offers a brighter picture: 94 percent PostTrak positivity and an A- CinemaScore suggest broad appeal beyond comic-book loyalists. Yet the film opened opposite Jurassic World Rebirth, which commanded $68 million overseas in its second frame, a factor credited with siphoning international market share from the Man of Steel.
Pre-release models now project a domestic finish near $350 million and worldwide earnings in the $650 million range if weekday holds match the 2013 Man of Steel trajectory. Observers also highlight genre weariness; a recent industry brief argued that “spectacle fatigue” has redefined success thresholds for superhero films, making legs rather than peaks the new metric of health. For DC Studios co-chief James Gunn, the opening provides a solid launchpad, but the weeks ahead will determine whether Superman can truly reset the franchise’s financial gravity.





















































