Superman already has a lot on his shoulders. It seems unfair to add the fate of the summer movie season to his list. But he's not alone â Marvel Studios is also returning to theaters in a big way with two movies this summer, âThunderboltsâ and âThe Fantastic Four: First Steps.â
Five years after the COVID-19 pandemic brought the movie business to a halt, and two years after the strikes, the industry has yet to fully recover. Critics may have complained of superhero fatigue, but after several summers of depleted offerings, itâs clear that theyâre a vital part of the mix.
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Superheroes alone don't make for a healthy marketplace, however, and this year studios have set a full slate for every kind of moviegoer, with over 40 wide releases spanning genres.
âThis is the summer where all this product that weâve all been working on for the last few years is finally coming into the marketplace, so Iâm very optimistic,â says Joseph Kosinski, who directed âF1â with Brad Pitt.
Key movies in the summer 2025 lineup
Summer begins early in Hollywood, on the first weekend in May and that kick-off can make or break that pivotal 123 day corridor that has historically accounted for around 40% of the annual box office.
After the strikes upended the 2024 summer calendar, this year Disney is back in that familiar first weekend spot with âThunderbolts." Memorial Day weekend could also be a behemoth with the live action âLilo & Stitchâ and âMission: Impossible â The Final Reckoning." With a new âJurassic World,â a live action âHow to Train Your Dragonâ and the Formula One movie also on the schedule through June and July, the summer season has the potential to be the biggest in the post-COVID era.
There are also family pics (âSmurfs,â âElio"); action and adventures (âBallerina,â âThe Karate Kid: Legendsâ); horrors, thrillers and slashers (â28 Years Later,â âI Know What You Did Last Summer,â âM3GAN 2.0"); romances (âMaterialists,â âJane Austen Wrecked My Lifeâ); dramas (âSorry, Baby,â âThe Life of Chuckâ); a new Wes Anderson movie (âThe Phonecian Schemeâ); and comedies (âFreakier Friday,â âBride Hard,â âThe Naked Gunâ).
âDraw me a blueprint of a perfect summer lineup: 2025 is it," says Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore.
What this summer's big directors are saying
âItâs a fun twist on what a movie like this could be,â says âThunderboltsâ director Jake Schreier.
âItâs a personal journey for Superman thatâs entirely new,â says âSupermanâ director James Gunn. âBut itâs also about the robots and the flying dogs and all that stuff. Itâs taking a very real person and putting them in the middle of this outrageous situation and outrageous world and playing with that. I think itâs a lot of fun because of that."
âItâs working on an incredibly large scale in terms of world building, but itâs also no different from all of the great comedies and dramas that Iâve done,â says âThe Fantastic Four: First Stepsâ director Matt Shakman. âIn the end, it comes down to character, it comes down to relationships, it comes down to heart and humor.â
âPeople say, like, do you feel pressure and the most pressure I feel is from myself as a fan and to Steven Spielberg, to not disappoint him," says âJurassic World Rebirthâ director Gareth Edwards. âWeirdly whatâs great about doing a Jurassic movie is that everybody knows deep down that like half the reason theyâre in this business is because of that film and Stevenâs work.â
Why summer 2025 might be a big one for movies
Before the pandemic, all but one summer since 2007 broke the $4 billion mark. Since 2020, only one has: 2023, led by âBarbie.â
The unstable economy might work in the industryâs favor, at least when it comes to moviegoing. Even with increased ticket prices, theatrical movies remain the most affordable entertainment outside of the home and attendance tends to increase during recession years. The annual domestic box office crossed $10 billion for the first time in 2009.
âBy the end of this summer, hopefully people arenât talking about being in a funk anymore and it feels like we got our mojo back and weâre off to the races," Kosinski, who directed the pandemic-era hit âTop Gun: Maverick,â says.
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For more on this yearâs summer movie season, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/movies