Featured  ·  Marvel  ·  Movies  ·  News  ·  Opinion

Thunderbolts Now on Track to Perform Worse than Captain America Brave New World in Latest Box Office Projection

April 15, 2025  ·
  W. D. W. Pro
The Thunderbolts

The Thunderbolts in Marvels Thunderbolts* - YouTube, Marvel Entertainment

Marvel’s next big film is on track to be the worst performing MCU since The Marvels. It could be the canary in the coal mine, truly.

By all available metrics, Thunderbolts is shaping up to be a full-scale alarm bell for The Walt Disney Company. The anti-hero ensemble film, originally hyped as a gritty, edgy answer to Marvel fatigue, is now on track to become one of the lowest-grossing movies in the history of the Marvel Cinematic Universe — possibly the lowest, depending on how ticket sales shake out in the coming weeks. And with two other MCU entries on the 2025 slate already wobbling, this could be the year the world’s most successful cinematic franchise finally loses its grip on audiences.

According to both Box Office Pro, Thunderbolts is tracking for a domestic opening weekend between $63 million and $85 million, with a target around $70 million. That would position it among the bottom three MCU opening weekends of all time, behind films like Shang-Chi and Eternals, and not far above the franchise’s historic low, The Marvels, which debuted to just $46 million last year before collapsing with a global gross under $210 million.

 

What’s most concerning is that Thunderbolts doesn’t have the excuses that hampered other Marvel underperformers. It’s not a brand-new IP with unfamiliar characters. It’s not releasing in the middle of a pandemic. It’s not being quietly dumped or facing off against dominant box office competition. If anything, this should be a safe swing — a cast of recognizable characters, built from existing Disney+ shows and Phase 3-4 films, arriving in a relatively open marketplace. And still, interest is tepid at best.

Pre-sales data tells a sobering story: tickets are now available, and early indicators show “lots of empty seats,” even for Thursday previews and Friday primetime shows. The fanbase isn’t clamoring to be first in line. As Cosmic Book News notes, Thunderbolts will likely rely on word-of-mouth to turn things around — a risky bet for a franchise that has lost considerable trust with casual audiences and hardcore fans alike.

The reliance on social media buzz mirrors the surprise success of the Minecraft movie, which turned around dismal presale numbers with an explosion of TikTok-fueled enthusiasm. But the difference? Minecraft had novelty, Gen Z appeal, and a broader fanbase untethered from a decade of lore. Thunderbolts, by contrast, feels like a patchwork of side characters stitched together after Marvel lost its A-list momentum.

If Thunderbolts fails, it will mark the second straight MCU misfire of 2025, following Captain America: Brave New World, which opened to a modest $88.8 million over President’s Day weekend and has struggled to reach $200 million domestic after more than a month in theaters. That film’s inability to rally interest — despite being built around a core Avenger role — suggests the brand itself may be suffering from deep erosion.

Looking ahead, Disney’s next hope is Fantastic Four: First Steps in July — a so-called “fresh start” for the MCU. But that’s a lot of pressure to place on a reboot of a twice-failed franchise, especially when general audiences no longer consider the Marvel logo a guarantee of quality or excitement. There are more reasons to worry that Fantastic Four could fail.

Thunderbolts

The team in Marvels Thunderbolts* – YouTube, Marvel Entertainment

Disney has invested tens of billions into the MCU — not just in film budgets, but in Disney+ series, tie-in merchandise, and theme park integration. A failed MCU slate in 2025 would be more than just a financial underperformance; it would rattle investor confidence, damage the Disney+ value proposition, and potentially force the company to make painful decisions about what once seemed like its most bulletproof IP.

With Thunderbolts facing poor projections, Brave New World floundering, and only Deadpool & Wolverine providing any hope for a mega-hit, the pattern is clear: the MCU is losing cultural traction. And if Thunderbolts ends up as the worst performer in Marvel Studios’ modern history, Disney may finally be forced to acknowledge what fans have seen coming for years — the Marvel formula is broken, and no amount of cameos or callbacks will fix it.

Author: W. D. W. Pro
Founder, Publisher, CEO WDW Pro is an opinionated commentator on all things Disney and Entertainment. He runs one of the most-viewed pop culture news channels on YouTube with many millions of views every month. First becoming well-known on WDWMagic.com, the author was brought on to work at Pirates and Princesses. Pro has previously released exclusive details on a variety of rumors and leaks before they were made public. Some exclusives have included breaking info on new Epcot attractions, detailing the light saber experience at the Star Wars hotel, reporting a Harrison Ford injury severity before anyone else, revealing Hugh Jackman was coming to the MCU, Storm would be linked with Wakanda and more. WDW Pro has written articles viewed by millions of readers while maintaining an 87% accuracy rating for revealing "insider" information in 2020. In 2021, the author had a better than 90% accuracy on reported leaks and rumors. Pro joined That Park Place on June 22nd, 2021. The author's accolades include being featured on The Daily Wire, cited by Timcast, numerous references by YouTube personalities, as well as having material tweeted by Dr. Jordan Peterson. WDW Pro is honored, and grateful, while hoping to make the world a better place. In 2023, a third party audit found Pro's accuracy for rumors and scoops to be 92.5%. SOCIAL MEDIA: X: http://x.com/wdwpro1 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WDW_Pro EMAIL: wdwpro@thatparkplace.com