Meanwhile, also in 2019, Sony released its highest-grossing film to date, Spider-Man: Far From Home, which entered the top 25. Toy Story 4 and Captain Marvel gave Disney even more reason to celebrate last year as they entered the top 50, and the year ended on a high note for the studio, with Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker joining the list, even if the final(?) Skywalker film – which has now passed $1 billion globally – underperformed expectations. Simba’s kingly box office performance as well as a stellar result for Frozen II means that Disney now occupies six of the 10 top box office rankings of all time worldwide. Meanwhile, the Mouse House’s live-action remake of The Lion King – or “computer-animated remake,” depending on which side of the argument you’re sitting on – entered the top 10 highest-grossing films of all time at number 7.
#Highest grossing movies 2013 movie
Avengers: Endgame officially became the number 1 movie of all time, globally, when Disney and Marvel Studios re-released the film with a tiny amount of fan-baiting new footage (it was a gamble that paid off, as it was looking like the movie might not be able to catch previous number 1, Avatar, despite a record-shattering opening weekend box office).
#Highest grossing movies 2013 tv
Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.(Photo by © Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, © Marvel Studios)Ģ019 may not have been the biggest year ever at the box office, but it had a number of massive films that entered the top 50 highest-grossing movies of all time – including one that took out the number 1 slot. Emperor (Roadside Attractions) – $3,346,265 Metallica Through The Never (Picturehouse) – $3,419,967ģ0. Much Ado About Nothing (Roadside Attractions) – $4,328,849Ģ8. The Company You Keep (Sony Pictures Classics) – $5,133,027Ģ5. Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom (The Weinstein Company) – $5,236,120Ģ3. All Is Lost (Roadside Attractions) – $5,972,093Ģ0. The Grandmaster (The Weinstein Company) – $6,594,959ġ7. Before Midnight (Sony Pictures Classics) – $8,114,627ġ5. Fruitvale Station (The Weinstein Company ) – $16,101,339ġ1.
The Place Beyond The Pines (Focus) – $21,403,519ħ. Blue Jasmine (Sony Pictures Classics) – $33,022,324Ĥ. Instructions Not Included (Lionsgate/Pantelion) – $44,467,206Ģ. Included, and a lot of films listed could see a considerable amount of their grosses still come in 2014.ġ. Screened only as an Academy-qualifier in 2012 (“Quartet,” “The Independent distributor or a studio specialty division. (initially under 500 screens) in 2013 and were released by an Note this list only includes North American grosses for specialty films - indie,įoreign and/or documentary - that opened in limited release More on that Monday via our commentary on the biggest winners at the indie box office this year. last year’s 4), $10 million grossers (12 vs. Comparatively, this year had more $20 million grossers (6 vs. Notably, last year’s highest grossing film - “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” - saw its stars Judi Dench and Maggie Smith both represented in this year’s top 10 too with “Quartet” and “Philomena” (continuing the significant trend of the “silver dollar”).
Rounding out the top 10 were “ Mud,” “The Way, Way Back,” “ The Place Beyond The Pines,” “ Quartet,” “Enough Said,” “Philomena” and “Fruitvale Station.” At number 24, “20 Feet From Stardom” was the highest grossing documentary. While Steve McQueen’s “12 Years a Slave” and Woody Allen’s “Blue Jasmine” were among the only three films to gross over $30 million, it was Lionsgate and Pantelion’s massive Spanish-language hit “Instructions Not Included” - directed and starring by Mexican star Eugenio Derbez - that led the year’s crop. Here’s a chart of 2013’s thirty highest grossing films tracked by Indiewire’s box office charts.