Supergirl takes off at half power while Toy Story 5 keeps reigning
Milly Alcock's debut as Supergirl came in below expectations at the box office. Pixar's toys still rule the summer.
The new Supergirl reached cinemas, but the landing was less triumphant than Warner had hoped. The film starring Milly Alcock — the same face as young Rhaenyra in House of the Dragon — opened with around $38 million in the United States and $68 million worldwide, nearly half what initial projections suggested.
For perspective, James Gunn’s Superman opened last summer with $125 million in the US market alone. Supergirl, on a $170 million budget, falls clearly short — and the B- the audience handed it on CinemaScore doesn’t help paint a rosy future.
The toys won’t leave the throne
The one still partying is Pixar. Toy Story 5 held the top of the box office, adding another weekend of huge numbers and confirming itself as one of the year’s great phenomena. It seems that, between a caped heroine and Woody with Buzz, audiences still pick nostalgia.
It’s not all bad for Supergirl: superhero films live a lot on word of mouth and international markets, and there’s still room to recover. But the start leaves Hollywood with the old question on its mind again — has the public tired of capes and powers?
In Portugal, both films are showing, and you can watch both sides of this summer battle on the big screen.
See also: Toy Story 5’s record opening and the F1 movie sequel with Brad Pitt. More on the universe at DC.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons