Photo Credit: Amazon MGM Studios
Masters of the Universe‘s opening weekend numbers paint a tough picture for the film’s road to profitability. Its global debut and reported budget reveal a significant gap between earnings and its break-even threshold.
Masters of the Universe’s box office struggles to justify its budget
Masters of the Universe opened to $54.3 million globally during its debut weekend, according to Deadline and Box Office Mojo. The film earned $29.3 million domestically and $25 million internationally. Its reported production budget sits between $170 million and $200 million.
The general rule requires a film to earn approximately 2.5 times its production budget to break even. At the lower budget estimate of $170 million, the break-even threshold reaches $425 million. A $200 million budget pushes that target even higher, making profitability a steep climb.
The opening weekend’s $54.3 million global haul represents roughly a quarter of the lower budget estimate. That gap between earnings and break-even creates significant pressure on the film’s theatrical run. Director Travis Knight’s star-studded cast, featuring Nicholas Galitzine and Jared Leto, failed to draw younger audiences.
Demographics played a key role in the underwhelming debut. Only 5% of opening weekend viewers were under 12, and just 6% fell between 13 and 17. Those age groups have reportedly driven recent hits like The Super Mario Galaxy Movie and Hoppers. The largest demographic, at 29%, was viewers aged 45 to 54.
The film currently holds a 67% critics’ score on Rotten Tomatoes alongside an 88% audience score. That strong audience reception mirrors the nostalgia factor among older viewers who grew up with the franchise. However, nostalgia alone has not sustained similar projects at the box office.
Masters of the Universe now joins Tron: Ares, The Running Man, and The Fall Guy as 1980s remakes that struggled theatrically. Its post-credits scenes tease potential sequel directions for the franchise. The coming weeks will determine whether legs can close the massive gap toward profitability.
