In 2025, The Walt Disney Company is enduring what might go down as its darkest theatrical year in memory—accumulating a cascade of box-office disappointments that arguably outstrips any distributor in a single calendar year. In fact, Disney has likely broken the record for most financial failures at the box office in a single year… beating its own previous record in 2023!
A string of headline projects, Captain America: Brave New World, Snow White, Thunderbolts, Elio, Fantastic Four (in its latest iteration), Freakier Friday and now the underwhelming debut of Tron: Ares, have each fallen short of expectations to various degrees. This marks a precipitous reversal for a studio that has long been considered a gold standard in franchise-driven entertainment.

Anthony Mackie as Sam Wilson/Captain America in Marvel Studios’ CAPTAIN AMERICA: BRAVE NEW WORLD. Photo by Eli Adé. © 2024 MARVEL.
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At first glance, some of these can be labelled “flops” only with market understanding. Captain America: Brave New World, for example, grossed a reported $415 million globally—but box-office analysts suggest it still lagged the break-even threshold once factoring in its production and marketing costs. In other words, “success” in raw grosses did not always translate into profit.
Similarly, Thunderbolts, despite critical goodwill, failed to deliver the margins Disney had hoped for—it earned about $382 million worldwide but still struggled to meet its break-even target. Meanwhile, Snow White significantly underperformed, with global grosses of around $205–206 million on a budget in the $240–270 million range, marking it as a bona fide box-office bomb by every measure. Tron: Ares, the latest to join the list, debuted with just $33.5 million domestically and about $60 million worldwide, against a production budget of about $180 million (not including marketing). All together, Tron 3 needs about $600 million to break even: a number it is almost certain to never achieve.

The Disney logo with a Tron Ares Overlay – YouTube, Disney
To characterized 2025 as Disney’s worst theatrical year ever is not hyperbole when assembled as a full slate. The sheer number of marquee projects that either failed to recoup their costs or delivered muted returns is rare in modern studio history. In recent weeks, box-office observers and trade outlets have openly wondered whether Disney is now the distributor with more “major” flops in a single year than any before it. The argument gains weight when considering that these are not small indie titles—they are tentpole releases, marquee brands, and legacy properties that historically would carry the company’s bottom line.
A natural comparison point is Disney’s 2023 theatrical slate, which also included its share of misfires. That year, Disney reportedly lost close to $1 billion on four major flops spanning both its cinematic and streaming wings. Among those was The Marvels, which has been cited as the most significant box-office loss for the studio that year. While Disney’s 2023 missteps were painful—and widely publicized—they were fewer in number, and some still had mitigating factors (e.g. release timing, genre risks, or audience fragmentation). The leap from four major failures in 2023 to perhaps half a dozen (or more) in 2025 signals not just a stumble, but a systemic crisis of predictability and confidence in Disney’s theatrical strategy.

Bob Iger via CNBC Television YouTube
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Even more striking is this year-to-date string of disappointments coming on the heels of Bob Iger’s own bullish statements. Earlier in 2025, Iger told shareholders that the studio’s upcoming slate was the “strongest” since 2019. Industry commentators noted that he essentially named every major film on the slate in that proclamation, signaling Disney’s confidence in its content pipeline. Yet as the year plays out, that bravado has felt increasingly hollow. What was once a vote of confidence may now be a glaring misjudgment of audience appetites, execution, or the media environment.
To be fair, Disney is not entirely without defense: some films are still in their release windows and may rebound internationally or with ancillary markets. Moreover, it’s not unheard of for studios to absorb a handful of losses in exchange for a few runaway successes. But in this case, the pattern is too consistent to chalk up entirely to bad luck.

Rachel Zegler as Snow White in Snow White (2025), Walt Disney Studios
The contrast between Iger’s optimism and the unfolding reality is especially jarring. It raises deeper questions about how Disney now evaluates risk, how it projects confidence to shareholders, and how agile its leadership and creative teams can be when several tentpoles fail in succession. If these losses deepen or propagate into future years, Disney may face harder constraints—not just financially, but in its identity as the studio that both commands and defines the modern box office.
In the broader arc of cinematic history, studios have endured ebbs and flows. But when the crown jewel of Hollywood falters across multiple marquee releases, it invites a period of reckoning: reexamine greenlight processes, reset expectations, restore audience trust, and possibly reimagine what kinds of films Disney makes. As 2025 progresses, all eyes will be on whether Disney can stop the bleeding—or whether this year ultimately goes down in film lore as its greatest box-office collapse.
How do you feel about this string of Disney box office failures in 2025? Sound off in the comments and let us know!



That malevolent fool, Bob Iger, is the worst CEO of the year in my book. At least the gay Jaguar CEO, and that Cracker Barrel Karen, are not making as many of us suffer as Disney does.
Iger states he will “NOT TOLERATE” any opposition to DEI.
That’s a bold strategy, Cotton. Let’s see how it works out for them.
YouTube is eating Hollywood’s lunch. And Twitter (and YouTube) is eating the Legacy News Media’s lunch, in general. Everyone knows that, if you want to know what is REALLY going on, then jack into Twitter. (And other right wing social media).