The biggest box-office disappointments of 2024 so far

The biggest box-office disappointments of 2024 so far

This Memorial Day Weekend was not great for the box office. In fact, it was the worst Memorial Day for the movies since the '90s. The entire domestic box office pulled in just $126 million — in years past, the No. 1 movie alone has made as much as $160 million, as "Top Gun: Maverick" did in 2022.

A few factors have led to this. First, the WGA/SAG strikes last year put many productions on pause, so some of the bigger movies won't come out until later in the year.

Another factor is streaming and VOD. "The Fall Guy," which came out just a month ago, is already available to rent at home. For a family, it's cheaper to spend $20 to rent something at home than $50-plus on tickets, snacks, and drinks.

And finally? People just weren't convinced they needed to see some of these films on the big screen.

Here are some of the biggest surprise bombs at the box office this year.

"Furiosa" opened to a bleak $32 million over the four-day Memorial Day Weekend.

Anya Taylor-Joy behind a wall of fire
Anya Taylor-Joy in "Furiosa."Warner Bros.

As The Wrap pointed out, "Furiosa's" $32 million opening weekend is the lowest No. 1 total for a Memorial Day Weekend since 1995, when "Casper" topped the box office with $22 million.

Another depressing stat for the "Mad Max: Fury Road" prequel? According to Screen Rant, it had the worst second-week drop of any "Mad Max" movie, plunging a staggering 59%.

Now, why exactly is "Furiosa" flopping so hard? It might be a case of unreasonable expectations. "Fury Road" is rightfully hailed as one of the best action movies of all time, but it didn't light the box office on fire at first either. Its domestic opening in 2015 was $42.4 million, ending up at a respectable $380 million worldwide.

Also, Anya-Taylor Joy (who plays the titular Furiosa) is famous but not a definite movie star yet — arguably, her big break was for a TV show ("The Queen's Gambit"), and her last big cinematic hits ("Dune: Part Two" and "The Menu") were sold on bigger stars like Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, and Ralph Fiennes.

"The Garfield Movie" has not been as successful as "Kung Fu Panda 4."

the garfield movie
"The Garfield Movie."Sony Pictures Releasing

We can't only blame "Furiosa" for the abysmal Memorial Day box office. The other film that opened as counter-programming that weekend was "The Garfield Movie," the second animated adaptation of everyone's favorite grumpy cat.

The film, which stars Chris Pratt as Garfield, made just $31 million on its opening weekend. So, between "Garfield" and "Furiosa," the top two movies at the box office made a total of $63 million.

For context, the No. 1 movie at the box office last Memorial Day weekend was "The Little Mermaid," which made $118 million.

After the billion-dollar success of "The Super Mario Bros. Movie" (also starring Pratt), "Garfield" simply couldn't measure up. The other big animated movie of the year, "Kung Fu Panda 4," opened to $57 million and has made $541 million worldwide.

Another test for "Garfield" will be how it fares against "Inside Out 2" on June 14.

"The Fall Guy" didn't light up box offices in the way some thought it would.

Ryan Gosling standing next to Emily Blunt
Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt in "The Fall Guy."Universal

An action rom-com led by the two of the stars of last year's box-office phenomenon, Barbenheimer? You'd think that'd be a no-brainer smash, but "The Fall Guy" hasn't lived up to those lofty expectations.

Variety reported that the film was projected to debut between $30 and $40 million, but it made just $28.5 million. At this point, it's made $158 million worldwide.

As Business Insider's Jason Guerrasio noted before the film premiered, this May was the first time in 17 years (excluding 2020) that a Marvel movie of some kind hasn't kicked off the summer. Last May's Marvel film, "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3," made $118 million domestically in its opening weekend.

With that looming over its head, it's no surprise that "The Fall Guy," based on the little-remembered '80s TV show of the same name, couldn't measure up.

"Argylle" has made less than half its budget back.

Henry Cavill as Agent Argylle in "Argylle."
Henry Cavill as Agent Argylle in "Argylle."Peter Mountain/Universal Pictures, Apple Original Films, and MARV

Put aside the deeply annoying "Who is the real Agent Argylle?" marketing campaign and think about how wild this is: "Argylle," an action spy-thriller starring Oscar-winner Sam Rockwell, former Superman Henry Cavill, the former star of a multi-billion-dollar franchise Bryce Dallas Howard, living legend Samuel L. Jackson, comedy icon Catherine O'Hara, beloved actor Bryan Cranston, and current pop star Dua Lipa couldn't crack $100 million at the box-office.

Compare that to the $200 million it cost Apple to make, as reported by Indiewire, and that's a true box-office bomb, even if Apple claims otherwise.

"Madame Web" solidified that the Sony Spider-Man Universe is truly in trouble.

Dakota Johnson as Cassandra Webb in "Madame Web."
Dakota Johnson as Cassandra Webb in "Madame Web."Jessica Kourkounis/Sony Pictures

If you're unfamiliar with the Sony Spider-Man Universe (or the SSU), here's a quick explanation: Marvel (and, therefore, Disney) now owns the rights to almost all of its comic characters. The one property it can't get back? Spider-Man and all his related villains, friends, and love interests, which are still owned by Sony.

Although Sony and Disney have agreed on a deal that allows Spidey to appear in the MCU, Sony is still holding tight to the rest of his associates, which is how we end up with films like "Venom," "Morbius," "Kraven the Hunter," and yes, "Madame Web."

Why Sony thought this movie was a good idea is beyond us — Madame Web is a little-known character (and matters even less without, you know, Spider-Man around to help save the day), and star Dakota Johnson hasn't proven herself to be a cinematic draw outside IP-driven properties like "Fifty Shades of Grey," which made a combined $1.3 billion worldwide.

With a dismal worldwide box office of $100 million, all that the SSU has proven is that these movies make for good memes.

"The First Omen" also underperformed against initial box-office predictions.

Nell Tiger Free as Margaret in "The First Omen."
Nell Tiger Free as Margaret in "The First Omen."Moris Puccio/20th Century Studios

"The First Omen" is by no means a huge disappointment for 20th Century Studios — it's made $53 million worldwide against a $30 million budget — but it wasn't the hit you might've expected from one of the most iconic franchises in horror history.

Variety even reported that projections expected the film to make $14 to $15 million on opening weekend. It made a little over half that: just $8.3 million.

"The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare" was 2024's second movie starring Henry Cavill to flop.

Henry Cavill as Gus March-Phillipps in "The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare."
Henry Cavill as Gus March-Phillipps in "The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare."Daniel Smith for Lionsgate

Director Guy Ritchie's latest film is about Winston Churchill's secret special forces team that operated in World War II. This team would perform top-secret missions to take down the Nazis — it's destined to become a No. 1 dad movie in the future.

But for now, this film starring Cavill, Eiza González, Alan Ritchson, and Henry Golding will be known as a movie that cost $60 million to make, according to Variety, and earned just $25.3 million.

It's been a rough few years for Cavill post-"Justice League" in 2017. He began starring in "The Witcher" in 2019 (a very successful show by all accounts), only to leave after season three. It's never been officially announced why he left, but the timing did line up with his cameo as Superman in the DCEU film "Black Adam" in 2022.

Unfortunately for Cavill, when James Gunn took over the DC film division, he announced his plans to scrap the entire DCEU (DC Extended Universe) and start fresh with a brand-new Superman, now played by David Corenswet.

And now, Cavill's last two films since his last appearance as Superman in "The Flash" have bombed.

"The Book of Clarence" made just 15% of its budget back.

The Book of Clarence
LaKeith Stanfield in "The Book of Clarence."TriStar Pictures

"The Book of Clarence" is an alternate-history biblical comedy that posits the existence of a 13th Apostle, Clarence.

"The Book of Clarence" is only director Jeymes Samuel's second film. His first, "The Harder They Fall," was a critical success and enjoyed by viewers, but it debuted on Netflix, so it was hard to gauge what the box office would be like for his follow-up.

It turns out that biblical comedy doesn't go over as well as a Western. According to Variety, "The Book of Clarence" cost $40 million to produce and made only $6.2 million worldwide.

"Lisa Frankenstein" made less than $10 million worldwide.

Kathryn Newton holds onto Cole Sprouse from behind in a still from Lisa Frankenstein
Kathryn Newton and Cole Sprouse put a twist on a classic in 'Lisa Frankenstein.'Michele K. Short/2024 Focus Features LLC

Cole Sprouse and Kathryn Newton have been tapped as potential movie stars in the next generation of Hollywood and have each been in successful films.

However, their star power and the value of "Frankenstein" as intellectual property didn't help this '80s teen comedy earn money.

Even though it was a relatively cheap film to make at just $13 million, according to Variety, it couldn't crack double digits at the box office. It made only $9.9 million.

"Drive-Away Dolls" is the lowest-grossing film directed by a Coen brother in 33 years.

drive away dolls
Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan in "Drive-Away Dolls."Focus Features

"Drive-Away Dolls" was directed by Ethan Coen and was the first film he directed on his own without his brother, Joel (excluding the 2022 documentary, "Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble in Mind").

It was also the first Coen film to make less than $10 million since 1991's "Barton Fink," which made $6.2 million to "Drive-Away Dolls'" $6.8 million. The Coens have since made 14 films, some of which made as much as $252 million ("True Grit").

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