Up until a few days ago, only five movies in history had earned $20 million or more at the domestic box office in their fifth weekend of release. Guardians of the Galaxy became the sixth over Labor Day, and is now the top movie of 2014 in terms of U.S. theater grosses.
Impressed? You should be. Guardians' $22.9 million, four-day haul ranks behind only Avatar ($42.8 million), Titanic ($30 million), and Frozen ($28.6 million). The Sixth Sense ($22.9 million) and Marvel's The Avengers ($20.5 million) round out the top six, according to Box Office Mojo. What can Disney (DIS -1.01%) investors expect from this franchise now that Guardians of the Galaxy is in elite company? Let's take a look at history for some clues.
Superheroic performances
All three of Marvel Studios' character franchises have benefited from the success of The Avengers. Two benefited as early as the sequel, while Iron Man waited till his third big-screen adventure to catch the tailwind:
First movie gross |
$370.6 million |
$585.2 million |
$449.3 million |
Second movie gross |
$714.1 million |
$623.9 million |
$644.8 million |
% Improvement |
+92.7% |
+6.6% |
+43.5% |
For the eagle-eyed who object to my not including a certain gamma ray monster in the table above, remember that Ang Lee's Hulk was developed in concert with, and distributed by, Universal Pictures in 2003. Marvel Studios wouldn't release The Incredible Hulk for another five years, with Universal once again acting as distributor. The Hulk needs another solo film to join the ranks of Marvel Studios franchise characters.
Buy the numbers
For the Guardians of the Galaxy, a second movie is already in the works. In fact, Marvel Studios was so confident in the franchise, that it announced plans for s sequel on July 26 at Comic-Con -- five days before the U.S. premiere. Smart move.
According to comparative data from Box Office Mojo, Guardians of the Galaxy is tracking ahead of Captain America: The Winter Soldier, and behind Iron Man 3 in terms of domestic grosses. We also know that the movie has earned about 51% of its box office haul from U.S. audiences, unusually high for a Marvel movie. (Iron Man 3, Thor: The Dark World, and Captain America: The Winter Soldier generated 66.3%, 68%, and 63.6%, respectively, of their worldwide grosses from foreign audiences.)
Add it up, and I'd say Guardians of the Galaxy is on track to earn $600 million to $650 million worldwide by the end of its theatrical run. A sequel could add another $725 million to $800 million when you consider Marvel Studios' history of success with follow-ups.
The power of franchising... revealed!
For investors, it's worth remembering how the Marvel movie franchises have multiplied results:
See the pattern? While Disney has been on an upward trend since completing the Marvel acquisition in January of 2010, the stock enjoyed its biggest gains following the May 2012 release of The Avengers. Earnings growth has multiplied during the same period. Guardians of the Galaxy may not have as big an impact; but as the top movie of 2014, it won't be small, either.