- Without adjusting for inflation, 54 movies have grossed $1 billion or more at the box office.
- Using data from Box Office Mojo, we compiled a list of the highest-grossing movies worldwide.
- “Inside Out 2” is the latest film to join the elite club.
Note: Kirsten Acuna and Kim Renfro contributed to previous versions of this post.
Worldwide gross: $1,008,524,647
Back in July of 2008, people began speculating that Christopher Nolan’s “Batman Begins” sequel starring Heath Ledger as the Joker might have the box-office power to set a world record. “There are even whispers starting whether ‘Dark Knight‘ can beat the incredible worldwide numbers posted by the all-time $1.8 billion benchmark of ‘Titanic,'” Deadline reported.
At the time, the film broke several box-office records, including highest-grossing opening weekend, highest Friday midnight showings, and highest-opening day record. “TDK” went on to become the highest-grossing movie of 2008.
The film’s successful viral marketing campaign and box-office performance really set the bar for what a superhero movie could be. Many consider it a blueprint for the success of superhero movies that came afterwards. Unfortunately, instead of DC catapulting into the stratosphere from here on out, Marvel took the lead, appearing on this list 10 times compared to DC’s four.
Worldwide gross: $1,025,468,216
When Tim Burton’s take on the original Disney classic hit $1 billion at the box office in 2010, it was only the sixth ever film to do so. In the years since, more than 20 other films have joined the club — but the sequel to this live-action “Alice In Wonderland” was not among them. 2016’s “Alice Through the Looking Glass” grossed over $299 million worldwide.
Worldwide gross: $1,029,266,989
Moviegoers flocked back to theaters in the summer of 2016 for Disney Pixar’s “Finding Nemo” sequel. It was the second animated feature of 2016 to pass the $1 billion mark (“Zootopia” is the other).
At the time, the box-office numbers also made “Finding Dory” the fifth highest-grossing animated movie of all time.
Worldwide gross: $1,037,913,579
Nineteen years after its initial 2001 release, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” managed to cross the $1 billion mark only after it was given a theatrical re-release in China.
Deadline reported that the movie had grossed $13.6 million over the course of three-days after it was released in theaters with a “remastered 4K 3D” version. It’s the second movie in the “Harry Potter” franchise to gross more than $1 billion.
Worldwide gross: $1,046,721,266
There are four total “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies in the franchise — and two of them have joined the billion-dollar club. “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides” sits behind the “Dead Man’s Chest” installment of this Disney franchise.
Worldwide gross: $1,058,684,742
“Rogue One” cemented its place in the “Star Wars” franchise by raking in $1 billion just 39 days after its global release. The spinoff became the fourth and final movie of 2016 to make $1 billion at the box office. All four billion-dollar movies of 2016 were Disney releases.
Worldwide gross: $1,067,316,101
The third movie in the “Toy Story” franchise crossed the $1 billion mark in 2010 and made Disney history as Pixar’s highest-grossing film of all time. The success of “Toy Story 3” helped push a fourth movie into Disney’s animated movie plan.
Worldwide gross: $1,077,022,372
The ninth episode in the “Star Wars” Skywalker saga, “The Rise of Skywalker,” crossed the $1 billion mark on Tuesday, January 14.
As reported by Variety, it took this film 28 days to hit this milestone, while “The Force Awakens” did it in 12 days and “The Last Jedi” managed it in 19 days.
Worldwide gross: $1,081,289,416
Christopher Nolan’s follow-up to “The Dark Knight” had became the 13th film in history to reach $1 billion in 2012. This achievement was remarkable, especially given concerns that the movie’s success would be dampened after the Aurora theater shooting took place during a midnight screening of the film.
Worldwide gross: $1,104,054,072
Ah yes, the unstoppable box-office power of the “Transformers” franchise. According to The Wrap, “Age of Extinction” (the fourth movie) was made specifically with international audiences in mind — and it paid off. Almost a third of the total box-office revenue came from China alone.
Worldwide gross: $1,123,794,079
The third “Transformers” movie was Paramount’s first film to reach $1 billion at the box office. Similar to “Age of Extinction,” the boost in ticket sales came largely from international movie audiences. This was the last “Transformers” movie which starred Shia LaBeouf.
Worldwide gross: $1,132,679,685
The Hollywood Reporter broke the news of this new milestone for the Spider-Man franchise as “Spider-Man: Far From Home” crossed the one-billion mark less than a month after its US premiere on July 2.
Worldwide gross: $1,152,028,393
“Aquaman” became the first DC superhero movie to make $1 billion dollars at the box office. The movie was already breaking records in China before it had opened in the US in early December, and clearly it was all up from there.
A sequel is set for December 2023 with Amber Heard reportedly in a pared-down role.
Worldwide gross: $1,159,457,503
The 2015 prequel to “Despicable Me” focused only on the overall-wearing Minions the world had come to love. People clearly appreciated the yellow henchman’s standalone film, since neither of the two “Despicable Me” movies have breached $1 billion.
Worldwide gross: $1,236,009,236
In April 2017, the eighth movie in “The Fast and the Furious” franchise joined the billion-dollar club. Clearly Vin Diesel’s creative control of these action-packed movies is paying off along with its diverse cast. This is the second movie from the franchise to make more than $1 billion.
Worldwide gross: $1,266,115,964
Also in April 2017, Walt Disney Studios announced that its live-action remake of “Beauty and the Beast” had officially passed the $1 billion mark for global box-office sales. Its total revenue makes “Beauty and the Beast” the highest-grossing film of 2017.
Worldwide gross: $1,310,469,037
The second installment in Universal’s rebooted “Jurassic Park” trilogy had an impressive opening weekend and then quickly grossed $1 billion after two weeks.
Worldwide gross: $1,342,480,797
Following the trend of some other franchises in our top list, the final “Harry Potter” film was the only one of the bunch that raked in $1 billion or more until “Sorcerer’s Stone” was given a theatrical release in China.
Worldwide gross: $1,361,992,475
Universal Pictures’ adaptation of the Nintendo game crossed $1 billion in just 26 days, making it the first film of 2023 to cross the threshold and the studio’s seventh-largest film.
“The Super Mario Bros. Movie” is the fifth film released during the pandemic to hit $1 billion theatrically and the first animated movie to do so.
Worldwide gross: $1,445,638,421
Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” has been unstoppable in theaters since its release. Not only did the film earn 2023’s highest-grossing domestic opening weekend, but it also contributed to the fourth-largest box-office weekend of all time.
When it crossed the billion-dollar mark in 17 days, Gerwig became the first solo female director to have a movie cross that threshold. Every other $1 billion movie directed by a woman has a male codirector.
“Barbie” is now the highest-grossing movie of 2023.
Worldwide gross: $1,462,000,000
After relegating titles like “Luca” and “Turning Red” to direct-to-streaming releases during the pandemic, which led to frustration and low morale within the company, Pixar is back on top.
“Inside Out 2” hit the $1 billion global mark in 19 days, the fastest ever for an animated movie. It’s also the only movie released in 2024 that has crossed the $1 billion mark.
We wouldn’t be shocked if Pixar is already crafting another sequel for Joy, Anxiety, and all of Riley’s other feelings.
Worldwide gross: $1,515,342,457
“Furious 7” broke records when it raced past the $1 billion box-office mark in just 17 days. As Entertainment Weekly reported “that makes ‘Furious’ 7 the fastest live-action film to reach that number.” But two other 2015 movies (coming later on our list) eventually bumped it to third place.
This was the last “Fast and Furious” movie to include Paul Walker, which some believe helped boost box-office numbers.
Worldwide gross: $1,663,079,059
“Jurassic World” broke all sorts of records. It bumped “Furious 7” out of the number one spot for fastest movie to make $1 billion when it broke the record in only 13 days. At the time it also stunned box-office analysts with the highest-grossing opening weekend of all time, besting “Marvel’s The Avengers,” with $208.8 million. Worldwide, it opened to over $500 million, making it the first movie to ever crack that number opening weekend.
That record didn’t last long, however.
Worldwide gross: $1,936,189,791
Spider-Man broke the pandemic curse. “No Way Home” became the first film since 2019’s “The Rise of Skywalker” to cross $1 billion at the box office. The Tom Holland-starring film crossed $1 billion in just 12 days and become the highest-grossing movie of 2021.
According to Forbes, it’s only the fifth film to cross $1 billion without a China release. If it ever does open there, it will likely cross $2 billion.
Worldwide gross: $2,071,310,218
The seventh movie in the “Star Wars” franchise broke the “Jurassic World” records when box-office numbers tallied $1 billion after only 12 days. And it didn’t stop there — “The Force Awakens” went on rake in more than $2 billion, solidifying its number four spot on our list and becoming the highest-grossing “Star Wars” movie of all time.
Worldwide gross: $2,320,250,281
Two weeks after its premiere in movie theaters, Cameron’s first “Avatar” sequel had already grossed more than $1 billion at the box office, a rare feat during the COVID-19 pandemic.
It then became the second-fastest movie to cross $2 billion in just 39 days.
While discussing the digital release of “Avatar: The Way of Water,” out March 28, producer Jon Landau told Insider he and Cameron wondered if the sequel to the 2009 film would reach the number “Titanic” crossed at the box office.
“I was never nervous that people would lose interest because I didn’t think they needed to have interest. I thought we were making a new movie,” Landau said when asked if he was nervous that audiences may lose interest in an “Avatar” sequel after waiting more than a decade for it.
“I looked at this almost like an original piece of content that happened to be with known characters in a known world, but we were showing them in a new way. So I was nervous about how the movie would do because when you stop being nervous, you stop caring. But I was never worried,” Landau added of the movie’s strong box-office performance.
Worldwide gross: $2,923,706,026
With more than $2.7 billion in box-office revenue, James Cameron’s “Avatar” was miles ahead of other films on the list.
Disney’s epic Marvel adventure “Avengers: Endgame” knocked it out of the top spot in the summer of 2019.
However, “Avatar” retook the top spot when Disney (which now owns the rights after the Fox acquisition) rereleased the film in China in spring 2021.
https://www.businessinsider.com/highest-grossing-movies-box-office-2017-1