The year 2024 has come and gone and we are currently just over a week into the brand new year. As such, I will soon begin to work on my yearly preview of 2025 as a whole, but before I do that, it’s time to take a deeper look into our very first month of the year – January 2025.
January is always an interesting month. There’s always three major story lines when it comes to what movies will be playing at your local theater throughout the month. The first is that there are always plenty of holiday holdovers. Second is the movies that open in limited release at the end of the previous year and expand during January around when Oscar nominations get announced. And the third, of course, is the brand new releases in January. The holiday holdovers this year include “Mufasa,” “Sonic 3,” “Nosferatu,” “Moana 2,” and “Wicked” – the five movies currently occupying the top five spots at the domestic box office. That group helped December earn $977 million total, the second highest month of the behind only July’s $1.18 billion total. And it brought the year as a whole to $8.56 billion, just short of 2023’s $8.91 billion. Prior to COVID hitting in 2020, the five years leading up to that all finished in the $11 billion range, so we’re not quite at were we used to be, but we’re not too far off.
In this monthly preview, we’ll focus mostly on the expanding releases and the new releases. That provides movie-going audiences with quite the variety of things to see. The new releases in January historically aren’t usually the most high quality movies as January is often one of those dumping ground months. But that’s balanced out with plenty of the awards hopefuls that strategically open in limited release to qualify for the Oscars, but then wait until January to open wide when the competition isn’t as high and/or when they can take advantage of the Oscar nominations to boost their profile. So that all leaves us with plenty to talk about as we dive in and explore this month!
As always, release date information for this post is courtesy of the-numbers.com and boxofficepro.com. The movies listed are the ones currently scheduled for a wide release in the United States and Canada and are always subject to change.
January 3 – 5
Vertical Entertainment's "The Damned" |
You may have noticed that I am again a week late putting this post out. I often like getting this post out before or during the first weekend of the month. As such, last week I went to work on this… and noticed that the first weekend of January had no new releases that were opening in at least 1,000 theaters. So there wasn’t much to talk about in that regard, thus I allowed myself a bit of extra time before I did this as the first part of January wound up being fairly busy for me.
In recapping the weekend, the ongoing battle of “Mufasa” and “Sonic 3” turned in the favor of “Mufasa” this weekend. “Sonic 3” had taken the first two weekends, but wound up being more front-loaded as fans of the franchise turned out more on opening weekend rather than waiting around. That’s often the case with popular, established IP, so there’s no surprise there. With “Mufasa,” demand for a prequel to the 2019 remake of “The Lion King” wasn’t incredibly high, which led to the low opening weekend. But as word of mouth came out as more positive than expected, that led to a more back-loaded run as more families decided to give it a chance in ensuing weekends. And as noted in the intro, “Nosferatu,” “Moana 2” and “Wicked” rounded out the top five.
The new release that wound up with the highest opening was The Damned, an Icelandic horror film that opened in 732 theaters. It’s described as a movie about a 19th-century widow having to make an impossible choice, during an especially cruel winter, when a foreign ship sinks off the coast of her Icelandic fishing village. It wasn’t particularly well received by those who did see it as it wound up with a 65 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and a 6.2 on IMDb. Not terrible, but not great. The overall result was it opening down in 13th place with just $769,721.
January 10 – 12
Lionsgate's "Den of Thieves 2: Pantera" |
The first new major wide release of the new year is Den of Thieves 2: Pantera, a sequel to a movie that maybe most people didn’t expect to actually get a sequel, but “Den of Thieves” was a January action film released back in 2018 that didn’t necessarily do particularly well. The movie is a heist film where a… den of thieves… set out to pull off a heist of the Federal Reserve Bank. The thieves were led by Pablo Schreiber, O’Shea Jackson Jr. and 50 Cent, while Gerard Butler led the LA police force in stopping them. The movie opened to $15.2 million in January 2018 and finished with $44.9 million domestically and $80.1 million worldwide. On a budget of $30 million, that was apparently enough to justify a second go-around. Although it took a few years, waited for a pandemic, and bounced around a few different studios before landing at Lionsgate. STX distributed the first movie and they sold the rights in 2023, initially to Briarcliff before it ended up with Lionsgate. But in this sequel, the escaped thieves are off to Europe to attempt another heist. And our LA police officer played by Gerard Butler has followed them there. Because, you know, why not? The first weekend of January saw “Mufasa” at the No. 1 spot with $23.5 million. And with the way that’s been holding, it might be in for a weekend total of $14-18 million, meaning that “Den of Thieves 2” is going to have to match or exceed the opening of its predecessor if it wants to take away that top spot. And it remains to be seen what the interest in this now franchise is after a five year gap between the first and the second movie, so it seems likely to take a backseat while “Mufasa” reigns for one more week.
[UPDATE: I typed this section before the weekend was finished and before I officially saw what the box office numbers are. I decided I wanted to keep my thoughts in tact. But the update here is that “Den of Thieves 2” won the weekend with just over $15 million, matching the debut of the first, while “Mufasa” fell to second with $14.2 million, a drop of 39 percent, which is its steepest so far and was thus on the lower end of what I projected. “Game Changer” opened to $2.1 million while “Better Man” earned $1.1 million in its first weekend of wide release. “The Last Showgirl” continued to not report numbers, but I can confirm via my local theater that it does, in fact, exist.]
While “Den of Thieves 2” is the only new major wide release, the Indian film Game Changer will also be released in an as-of-yet unknown number of theaters. As I’ve mentioned in the past, these films from India aren’t necessarily the best at reporting box office numbers or advertising their existence to the mainstream. They just kinda show up, make a few million in a weekend or two, then bow out. The most recent one was “Pushpa: The Rule – Part 2,” which opened to $4.8 million in 1,245 theaters. “Game Changer” isn’t a “Part 2,” so I don’t know if it’s going to open that high or in that many theaters, but we’ll see when the weekend is complete. It’s about an IAS officer trying to fight against a corrupt political system in another three-hour adventure. The trailer gives vibes of a one-man army with some crazy action sequences and random music and dance numbers. So, you know, par for the course.
That’s it for new releases, but as mentioned in the intro, another big story of this month is the expanding 2024 releases and this weekend will see a pair of those that will hit wide release. The first of those two is Better Man, which has been hanging out in 6 theaters since Christmas and will now expand into 1,289 theaters. This tells the story of British singer/songwriter Robbie Williams, who started his music career in the late 1990s and has since released 12 studio albums, the most recent of which was released in 2019. This is one of two musical biopics currently in theaters at the moment, the other being “A Complete Unknown,” which tells the story of Bob Dylan. So audiences currently have the option of heading out to learn about both Bob Dylan and Robbie Williams. What makes “Better Man” unique is that Robbie Williams is portrayed as an anthropomorphic chimpanzee using CGI and motion capture. Jonno Davies does the motion capture work in the movie, while Davies and Robbie Williams himself team up to provide the vocal work.
The other expansion this weekend is The Last Showgirl expanding into 780 theaters. Box office data wasn’t reported for the movie while it was in limited released, so I don’t know how many theaters it was in or how much it made, but it is eligible for the 2024 Oscars and is being reported as an expansion and not a new release, so I’m confident that it had a release of some sort at the end of December. The movie’s title is fairly descriptive in this instance. It’s about a showgirl who has had a successful 30 year run, but not has to plan her next steps after the show abruptly closes. Pamela Anderson is in the lead role here and while the movie itself hasn’t had a ton of awards buzz, Pamela Anderson’s performance actually has. She got a best actress nomination at both the Golden Globes and the Screen Actors Guild Awards and now the attention turns to see if she can earn the label of Oscar-nominated actress Pamela Anderson.
January 17 – 20
Universal's "Wolf Man" |
Monday, January 20 is Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the United States, meaning it’s a four-day holiday weekend at the box office. Often in January that’s the busiest box office weekend of the month. This year it’ll be led by the new horror film Wolf Man. Universal has been attempting or desiring to create a new Universal Monster cinematic universe for some time now. And I don’t think that’s what’s going on here, but it is the second adaptation of a classic Universal Monster movie from director Leigh Whannell, with the previous one being 2020’s “The Invisible Man,” which both performed well at the box office and was well regarded from critics and audiences. The movie only had three weekends in theaters before its run got cut short due to COVID, but it still managed $64.9 million domestically and $139 million worldwide in those three weeks, which considering its $7 million production budget is excellent. Plenty of success for Leigh Whannell and Universal to justify doing another one of these. The premise here is pretty self-explanatory. The movie is a modern remake of the 1941 movie “The Wolf Man.” Family gets attacked by a werewolf at night and man gets clawed by said werewolf and starts turning into a werewolf himself. The movie initially had Ryan Gosling attached to star, but he left and was replaced by Christopher Abbott. Whannell himself also left for a bit due to scheduling conflicts before coming back, so this has had plenty of production drama. “The Invisible Man” opened to $28.2 million back in 2020, which is about the range that “Wolf Man” is being projected to open around
The other new wide release for the weekend is the comedy One of Them Days, starring Keke Palmer and SZA as two roommates whose rent money gets blown by one of their boyfriends, causing them to go the extremes to avoid eviction and keep their friendship in tact. Comedies of late have had a really hard time in theaters. It seems that, for the most part, that’s a genre that people have become conditioned to watching mostly on streaming. In fact, Adam Sandler has found a very strong niche on Netflix with his comedies and they don’t even get released in theaters anymore. Every once in a while there’s a theatrical comedy that breaks out, but that’s few and far between and hard to predict. Recent examples of comedies in the calendar in this time of year include “Drive-Away Dolls” last February opening to $2.4 million, while the remake of “House Party” in January 2023 opened to $3.9 million. Best case scenario might be the Jennifer Lawrence comedy “No Hard Feelings” opening to $15 million in June 2023, but that was both a summer movie and had a huge movie star in Jennifer Lawrence. The biggest name “One of Them Days” has is SZA. And she’s of course a really popular singer, but can that translate into box office success? I’m guessing not. But this might be a movie that finds success on streaming later in the year.
Those two movies are it for new releases this weekend, but as I’ve mentioned several times in this post, there will be a handful of movies expanding this month due to the Oscars. And Oscar nominations will be announced during this weekend, on Sunday, January 19. Initially the plan was for the announcement to be on Friday, the 17th, but the voting period was extended two days due to the Los Angeles fires, and as such the announcement was postponed two days, from Friday to Sunday. Expect movies that get Oscar nominations to expand into more theaters to take advantage of the awards buzz to make themselves more widely available. Given the timing of the announcements on a Sunday morning, it remains to be seen if said movies will expand during this weekend or the following weekend.
Officially listed on the-numbers.com’s release schedule for a wide expansion this weekend is September 5, a movie that chronicles the 1972 Munich massacre terrorist attack at the Summer Olympics, from the vantage point of the ABC Sports crew that were covering the events. This movie is based on the same events that are the subject of Steven Spielberg’s 2005 movie “Munich.”
While “September 5” is the only movie officially listed for expansion on the site, other movies that have not yet had a wide release, and are currently hiding in less than 100 theaters include, but are not limited to, “The Brutalist,” “Nickel Boys,” “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” and “Santosh.” The french animated movie “Flow” has been slightly more widely available than those movies listed. It was released at the end of November and has had a max theater count of 377. If it gets the nominations expected for animated feature and international feature, it could expand further as well. Also, movies like “Anora,” “A Real Pain,” “Conclave” and “The Substance” have already had a wide release in the latter half of 2024, but could return to more theaters. Again, these movies could be this weekend or next weekend. And how many theaters they add is not yet known. But if you’re wanting to catch up on the awards movies you haven’t seen yet, this could be a good opportunity to do so.
January 24 – 26
Lionsgate's "Flight Risk" |
While a lot of the big releases and expansions in January take place over the holiday weekend, with maybe some additional expansions this weekend, given the timing of the Oscar nominations, the movies coming out this fourth weekend of January definitely feel like… a January. Not to say there isn’t any quality here. It’s just that it’s common for studios to just dump things in January to get them out of the way. And it doesn’t look like any of these four new releases have a ton of potential at the box office.
With that said, the movie that seems to have the most potential is the suspense thriller Flight Risk. This sees the return of Mel Gibson to the director’s chair in what feels like the most unheralded and unceremonious return of his career. Not saying the movie going to be bad, but usually Mel Gibson is a much bigger deal. He’s only directed five previous movies and those movies are “The Man Without a Face,” “Braveheart,” “The Passion of the Christ,” “Apocalypto,” and “Hacksaw Ridge.” And now nearly a decade after “Hacksaw Ridge,” he’s come back with… a small plane thriller that’s being dumped in January? It’s just a bit odd, is all. Eventually he has a sequel to “The Passion of the Christ,” which is about the resurrection, but that’s either later this year or early next year. Anyways, as described by Lionsgate, “Flight Risk” is about a pilot (Mark Wahlberg) transporting an Air Marshal (Michelle Dockery) accompanying a fugitive (Topher Grace). As the flight goes on, tensions soar and trust is tested, as not everyone on board is who they seem. And if you’ve watched the trailer, you’ll know exactly what they mean by that. And maybe they’ve spoiled the big reveal in the advertising? I guess you’ve gotta advertise the movie somehow. And if interest level didn’t seem particularly high, perhaps Lionsgate felt the need to do something to get people’s attention here.
What I haven’t mentioned in this post yet is that the Sundance Film Festival will begin at the end of this month, starting January 23 and going through February 2. And while that doesn’t effect directly affect the theatrical releases this weekend, I point it out because the second wide release this weekend is a horror film from last year’s Sundance Film Festival, NEON’s Presence. This is a movie directed by Steven Soderbergh, who continues to play around with the genre quite a bit. And this time around he’s taken the traditional haunted house story and flipped it to a degree where it’s a haunting movie from the perspective of the ghost or the spirit rather than the people living in the house. That’s a premise that sounds a bit like the A24 film “A Ghost Story” from last decade, although that movie was more of an unconventional drama and not really a horror film. Soderbergh’s last movie was “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” and that opened to $8.3 million in February 2023. Prior to that, most of Soderbergh’s movies went straight to streaming. The last theatrical release outside “Last Dance” was “Unsane” in 2018, which opened to $3.8 million. He hasn’t had a movie open north of $10 million since 2012, so he hasn’t been a huge theatrical draw. And that doesn’t seem likely to change here. However, NEON purchased this film for just $5 million, so on their end, the bar for success isn’t exactly super high.
It’s been three months in a row now where I’ve brought up Angel Studios in this post, so they’ve remained pretty consistent in releasing new movies as of late. Their movie this month is called Brave the Dark and is about a troubled teen with a dark past that has led to him getting into a lot of legal troubles. He’s bailed out of jail and taken in by his drama teacher, who is trying to work with him to help him get his life straightened out. While Angel Studios has been consistent in releasing movies, they’ve also been rather consistent in how much those movies have made. They released nine total movies in 2023 and 2024 combined. And seven of those movies have been between $10-20 million total domestically. The two outliers on both ends are “Sound of Freedom” exploding to the tune of $184.2 million domestically, while “Sight” made just $7.2 million. So statistically it seems likely that this opens around $5 million and ends up finishing between $12-15 million. The movie actually premiered back in 2023 to a few smaller film festivals, so it’s one that’s been around on the shelves and in production for a while now.
Rounding things out, GKIDS will be releasing the anime film The Colors Within. The movie is about a high school student named Totsuko who as the ability to see people as colors and becomes particularly fascinated with her classmate Kimi. The two of them end up joining a band with another student and develop their friendship while writing and playing music. The movie was released in Japan back in August 2024 and has its worldwide release handled by a few different distributors, but as mentioned its GKIDS that’s handling the North American release. Looking back at other movies GKIDS has distributed here, in 2020 and 2022 they released “Weathering with You” and “Belle” in those respective Januarys. The two movies opened similarly, with $1.8 million and $1.5 million. Anime here in the states is sometimes hard to predict. Everyone once in a while something breaks out and does really good in comparison, but it’s still more of a niche audience at the moment. Certainly no where as close to as big as it is in other countries, especially over in Asia.
January 31 – February 2
DreamWorks Animation's "Dog Man" |
The final weekend of January has one day in January and the other two days in February. I always count the weekend in the month that it begins in for those posts. That’ll split things up nicely for January and February. Four weekends for January and four weekends for February, given that there were no new releases in the first weekend of January. Anyways, in previous years the first Sunday in February was the home of the Super Bowl and that meant a not so good weekend for movies, unless they counter-programmed. But the NFL recently added a week to their schedule and that pushes the Super Bowl to the second weekend of February, which is February 9 this year.
That leaves this weekend wide open and it should rather easily be lead by the new DreamWorks movie Dog Man. If you have any younger kids around in your life, you might be aware of this one. This animated movie is based on a series of books, or graphic novels, that currently has 13 installments. They come from author Dave Pilkey, who is the author of the Captain Underpants series. In fact, Dog Man come into existence inside of the Captain Underpants series, first showing up in “Captain Underpants and the Terrifying Return of Tippy Tinkletrousers” when George and Harold get sent to detention and make their first comic: “The Adventures of Dog Man.” That book was back in 2012. Dog Man got its first official solo outing in 2016 and the general idea is that this is a new hero with the head of a dog and the body of a human, first created when an officer and his dog are injured together on the job and get a life-saving surgery that puts them literally together. In regards to DreamWorks and the Captain Underpants movie realm, the first Captain Underpants movie came out in June of 2017. It wasn’t necessarily DreamWorks’ biggest hit. It opened to $23.9 million and finished with $73.9 million domestically. But it continued via a Netflix series beginning the next year that so far has had three seasons and several spin-off specials. So it’s maintained its popularity. Box Office Pro, in their long range forecast, has pegged “Dog Man” to open in the $25-35 million range, which aligns with the Captain Underpants movies, especially if you adjust a bit for inflation.
Pairing up with “Dog Man” this weekend is the psychological thriller Companion, a movie in which the trailer has a lot of fun with. It starts out making you think that it’s a cute, romantic comedy for Valentine’s Day, playing some sweet music and saying that it’s from the studio that brought you “The Notebook” and is cordially inviting you to experience a new type of love story… before shifting tones and revealing that this is actually more of a horror film with Jack Quaid playing some sort of psychopath who has these humans trapped, then reveals that this is from the unhinged creators of “Barbarian.” I don’t know exactly what’s going on, nor do I want to dive too deeply so that I don’t accidentally spoil the experience the movie has in store. What I do know is that Jack Quaid seems like he’s having fun here. In addition to being in the 2022 “Scream” movie and the Amazon Prime series “The Boys,” he made an appearance in “Oppenheimer,” has done some voice work for “Star Trek: Lower Decks” and “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” and has this movie and the movie “Novocaine” in March. So he’s an actor who’s definitely having a moment. If this movie did follow the trajectory of fellow Warner Bros movie “Barbarian,” that opened to $10.5 million in September 2022. The $8-12 million range seems to be where a lot of horror movies are landing these days for their opening weekends.
Finishing off this month, we have the war thriller Valiant One, which is about a US helicopter that crashes in North Korea, which then sees the surviving soldiers and others have to find their way out on their own, given that they’re not going to get a lot of military support while in North Korea. This doesn’t appear to be based on anything, and doesn’t have a cast or crew with many recognizable names. So expectations probably aren’t too high and is one of those movies that’s just getting thrown into the end of January. It’s also being distributed by Briarcliff Entertainment, a smaller studio who has yet to have a movie make more than $10 million at the domestic box office. In October of last year, they released “The Apprentice,” which opened in 10th place to $1.6 million, then in December they opened the horror film Werewolves in 11th place with just over $1 million. So that’s the type of release we’re looking at here.