Looney Tunes: Animated Movies Are Still Box Office Gold

By Michael Giltz | August 5, 2025 4:37 pm PDT
Animated Movies Are Still Box Office Gold

Why original animated films are no riskier—and just as rewarding—as live action flicks

With the unfortunate collapse of Pixar’s “Elio” at the box office, the industry was quick to declare the death of the original animated feature. “Audiences aren’t interested,” goes the refrain. They’re expensive, hard to make, and nobody shows up.

Really? My gosh, what was the last original animated film to make a splash? ”Encanto?” And that only really caught fire on streaming. What’s going on?

Nothing new, I’m happy to report.

The Safe Bet Mentality
Studios love a sure thing — reboots, remakes, sequels, spin-offs. That’s not a new phenomenon; it’s as old as Hollywood. (Hey, Chaplin! Make another one of those Little Tramp shorts and be quick about it!)

Every so often, they’ll greenlight something “risky,” like “The Bad Guys,” with an $80 million budget. But even there, the comfort blanket was that it’s based on Aaron Blabey’s best-selling kids’ books. And hey, it worked — the film made $250 million worldwide.

That kind of success makes “The Bad Guys 2” inevitable. Sure enough, it opened solidly this year, and don’t be surprised if “Bad Guys 3” and “4” are already pencilled into a release calendar somewhere. Disney’s Bob Iger said it best: they just want to make great (read: hit) films — and if that means a few more “pointless but profitable” live-action remakes of animated classics, so be it.

Franchises Dominate — in Animation Too
Here’s the first reality check: original animated films aren’t being squeezed out by some mysterious shift in audience tastes. They’re being crowded out by a wall of sequels, prequels, remakes, and spinoffs — just like live action.

From 2013 to 2024 (excluding the pandemic years), roughly three out of every four Top 50 films at the domestic box office were based on existing IP — be it a book, comic, toy, video game, or a previous film. Animation matches that ratio almost exactly.

Chart 1: Animated Film Hit Rates (2013–2024)
Chart 1: Animated Film Hit Rates (2013–2024)

And it’s not just about what gets made — it’s about how often it gets made. In any given year, you can count the number of original animated films in the Top 50 on one hand. Often, you’ll only need one finger. This isn’t a “the audience doesn’t want them” story — it’s a “studios don’t make them” story. And when they do? Well…

The 10-Year Track Record
This is where the data gets very interesting. When an original animated film is made, its odds of being a hit are extraordinary.

Of the 81 animated films to crack the Top 50 between 2013 and 2024:

  • 67 were hits. That’s an 83% success rate — something the rest of the film industry would kill for.
  • Of the 19 originals, 15 were hits. That’s nearly 80%.
Chart 2: Animated Film Hit Rates (2013–2024)
Chart 2: Animated Film Hit Rates (2013–2024)

Animated films aren’t just popular — they’re consistently profitable. From 2013 to 2024, 85% of all animated films were hits, and 80% of original animated films succeeded — numbers most live-action genres can only dream about. The year-by-year fluctuation is minimal, even through the pandemic years, showing the stability of the animation market. In other words: if you make an animated film, the odds are strongly in your favor.

Yes, original animated films succeed at almost exactly the same rate as all animated films — most of which are sequels or adaptations. If four out of every five original live-action films worked this well, Hollywood would greenlight them until the cows came home.

And this isn’t cherry-picking: the pattern holds across the decade, before and after the pandemic disruption.

Chart 3: Animated Hits vs. Flops Per Year (2013–2024)
Chart 3: Animated Hits vs. Flops Per Year (2013–2024)

Case Study: The Last Three Years
Let’s zoom in on 2022–2024 — the years pundits often point to as proof that “everything has changed.”

2024: Not a single original animated film first released in 2024 made the Top 50. The only one that appeared — “Migration” — debuted in December 2023 and went on to gross $300M worldwide on a $72M budget. That’s a solid hit and sequel bait if ever there was one. Everything else? Franchise titles.

2023: Two originals made noise: Pixar’s “Elemental,” which opened softly but showed remarkable legs to reach nearly $500M, and Disney’s “Wish,” which underperformed. Throw in “Migration’s” holiday release, and you’ve got two hits, one flop.

2022: One original animated film — “Strange World.” A flop.

Over three years, that’s just four original animated films in the Top 50. Two hits, two flops. Batting .500 — which, in baseball terms, is Hall of Fame territory.

Chart 4: Originals vs. Non-Originals — Top 50 Films (2013–2024)
Chart 4: Originals vs. Non-Originals — Top 50 Films (2013–2024)

The point here is not that every original animated film will succeed — no category in Hollywood works like that. (Except for low budget horror films; even with this year’s glut, they keep delivering.) The point is that when studios actually produce them, their odds are at least as good as franchise titles. The data simply doesn’t support the “audience rejection” narrative.

The Pipeline Problem
So why aren’t major movie studios making more originals? The reasons are less mysterious than they are mundane:

  • Big budgets mean big stakes, and studio execs default to the familiar when nervous.
  • Known IP is easier to market — and easier to justify to shareholders.
  • Animation’s long production timelines make it harder to pivot to something new midstream.
  • Pandemic delays and cancellations disrupted the pipeline, leaving fewer originals ready to go.
Chart 5: Original vs. Non-Original Animated Films in Top 50 by Year
Chart 5: Original vs. Non-Original Animated Films in Top 50 by Year

The Bottom Line for Studios and Exhibitors
If someone tells you “audiences just aren’t interested in original animated films anymore,” ask yourself: what plausible reason would there be for that? I can’t think of one.

The people who loved “Coco,” “Moana,” and “Encanto” are lining up for their sequels — and for the next great original. Remember when pundits declared the rom-com dead? Then “Materialists” and “Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy” proved otherwise. Westerns? Dead — except for TV’s “Yellowstone.”

Animation is no different. Make them. Promote them. Play them. Audiences will come.

If you’ve only got $5M, make a horror film.

If you’ve got $150M? Make an animated film.

Th-th-th-that’s all folks!


Notes:
Definitions: “Original” is tricky to define. “The Mule,” based on a news article, counts as original because few were aware of that piece. “The Lego Movie”? Loosely inspired by a toy, so we count it too. I’ve tried not to put my thumb on the scale.

Scope: Top 50 domestic grossers only. Even “low budget” animated films are expensive, so including smaller releases doesn’t alter the trends. I also looked at the Top 100 for outliers; it doesn’t change the data or our analysis.

Hit Rule: I use the common standard that a film needs to gross 2.5x its budget at the box office alone to be considered a hit.

Appendix: The Year-by-Year Receipts
For those who like to see the homework, here’s the complete year-by-year breakdown of every animated film in the Top 50 from 2013–2024, with reported budgets, worldwide grosses, and whether they were originals. It’s the data behind all the charts and arguments above — the hits, the flops, and the in-betweens. If you’ve ever wondered what a decade of animated box office looks like laid out in cold, hard numbers, here it is.

YearTitleOriginal?Budget ($M)WW Gross ($M)Result
2024Inside Out 2No2001699Hit
2024Moana 2No1501059Hit
2024Despicable Me 4No100971Hit
2024Kung Fu Panda 4No85548Hit
2024Sonic The Hedgehog 3No122492Hit
2024The Wild RobotNo78335Hit
2024Mufasa: The Lion KingNo200723Hit
2024The Garfield MovieNo60257Hit
2024Transformers OneNo125129Flop
2023The Super Mario Bros. MovieNo1001361Hit
2023Spider-Man: Across The Spider-VerseNo150691Hit
2023ElementalYes200496Hit
2023PAW Patrol: The Mighty MovieNo30205Hit
2023MigrationYes72300Hit
2023Trolls Band TogetherNo95210Flop
2023WishYes200255Flop
2022Minions: The Rise of GruNo100940Hit
2022Sonic The Hedgehog 2No110405Hit
2022The Bad GuysNo80250Hit
2022Sing 2No85408Hit
2022Puss In Boots: The Last WishNo110484Hit
2022LightyearNo200226Flop
2022DC League of Super-PetsNo90207Flop
2022Lyle, Lyle, CrocodileNo50105Flop
2022Strange WorldYes18074Flop
2022The Bob’s Burgers MovieNo3834Flop
2019The Lion KingNo2501657Hit
2019Toy Story 4No2001074Hit
2019Frozen IINo1501453Hit
2019How To Train Your Dragon: The Hidden WorldNo129540Hit
2019The Secret Life of Pets 2No80431Hit
2019The Addams FamilyNo24204Hit
2019AbominableYes75188Hit
2019The Lego Movie 2: The Second PartNo100200Flop
2018Incredibles 2No2001243Hit
2018The GrinchNo75540Hit
2018Ralph Breaks The InternetNo175529Hit
2018Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer VacationNo80529Hit
2018Spider-Man: Into The Spider-VerseNo90394Hit
2018SmallfootYes80214Hit
2017Despicable Me 3No801035Hit
2017CocoYes225814Hit
2017The Lego Batman MovieNo80312Hit
2017The Boss BabyNo125528Hit
2017Captain Underpants: The First Epic MovieNo38125Hit
2017Cars 3No175383Flop
2017The Lego Ninjago MovieNo70122Flop
2016Finding DoryNo2001029Hit
2016The Secret Life of PetsNo75885Hit
2016ZootopiaYes1501025Hit
2016MoanaYes175687Hit
2016SingYes75634Hit
2016Kung Fu Panda 3No145521Hit
2016The Angry Birds MovieNo75352Hit
2016Sausage PartyYes20141Hit
2016StorksYes70183Hit
2016Ice Age: Collision CourseNo105408Hit
2015Inside OutYes175859Hit
2015MinionsNo751159Hit
2015Hotel Transylvania 2No80475Hit
2015The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of WaterNo75325Hit
2015The Peanuts MovieNo99246Hit
2015The Good DinosaurYes200332Flop
2014The Lego MovieYes65470Hit
2014Big Hero 6No165658Hit
2014How To Train Your Dragon 2No145621Hit
2014Rio 2No130499Hit
2014Penguins of MadagascarNo132374Hit
2014The Nut JobYes30120Hit
2014Mr. Peabody & ShermanNo145275Flop
2013Despicable Me 2No76971Hit
2013Monsters UniversityNo200744Hit
2013FrozenYes1501280Hit
2013The CroodsYes175587Hit
2013Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs 2No78274Hit
2013EpicNo93268Hit
2013PlanesNo93268Hit
2013The Smurfs 2No105348Hit
2013TurboYes135282Flop
Michael Giltz