简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
概要:Disney has brought in a record-breaking $7.67 billion in 2019, beating the previous record, also held by the studio, of $7.61 billion in 2016.
Disney broke its own record, which it set in 2016, for the highest-grossing year ever for a movie studio — and there's still five more months left in the year.
As of Sunday, Disney had brought in $7.67 billion at the worldwide box office, surpassing its 2016 record of $7.61 billion.
The studio also has the top five domestic earners of the year.
Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Disney movies cannot do wrong in 2019.
The studio is churning out box-office sensations on what seems on a weekly basis, and it's led to it breaking a huge record. On Sunday, Disney announced that its global box-office total for 2019 had hit $7.67 billion. That surpassed the previous yearly record for a studio from 2016, also held by Disney, of $7.61 billion. And there's still five more months left in the year!
Disney has been able to hit the record in half a year's time by having an unprecedented string of huge releases so far. It currently has the top five highest-grossing domestic movies of the year. And three of those — “Avengers: Endgame,” “Captain Marvel,” and “Aladdin” — have all grossed over $1 billion worldwide. Those titles will soon have company as “The Lion King” and “Toy Story 4” are close to hitting the milestone as well.
Also, “Endgame” recently surpassed “Avatar” to become the highest-grossing movie of all time with close to $2.8 billion earned worldwide.
And Disney's total figure for the year is only going to climb as 2019 continues.
Still on tap to hit theaters for the studio are two highly anticipated movies: “Frozen II,” the sequel to the hugely successful 2013 original; and “Star Wars: Rise of Skywalker,” the conclusion to the epic Skywalker saga in the “Star Wars” franchise.
Read more: How that scene of Leonardo DiCaprio in a classic movie during 'Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood' was pulled off
As all the other studios in Hollywood try to figure out how to compete with the money-making monster Disney has become, all they can do now is sit back in awe.
Disney currently holds a 37% of the domestic movie market share.
免責事項:
このコンテンツの見解は筆者個人的な見解を示すものに過ぎず、当社の投資アドバイスではありません。当サイトは、記事情報の正確性、完全性、適時性を保証するものではなく、情報の使用または関連コンテンツにより生じた、いかなる損失に対しても責任は負いません。