Disney’s Marvel Drought Begins: Fantastic Four Flops Against Last Year’s Hits

Disney’s Marvel Drought Begins: Fantastic Four Flops Against Last Year’s Hits

Disney’s latest earnings show the Entertainment segment taking a significant hit, with operating income falling to $691 million, down sharply from $1.067 billion during the same quarter last year.

The company pointed directly to theatrical comparisons as the main reason for the decline.

Marvel’s Fantastic Four: First Steps opened in the quarter, but the film entered a financial environment it had little chance of winning.

Fantastic Four Passes $500M, But Still a Box Office Flop

Fantastic Four Faced an Impossible Comparison

Last year’s fourth quarter featured two of Disney’s biggest modern hits: Deadpool & Wolverine and Inside Out 2. Both films delivered record numbers that carried the entire segment, boosting licensing, theatrical revenue, and downstream performance. Those titles created a box office bar Marvel couldn’t clear this year, especially with a softer slate and a reboot like Fantastic Four generating more modest interest, at best.

Disney noted that Content Sales and Licensing revenue dropped from $2.585 billion to $1.902 billion, and operating income in that category swung from a $316 million gain to a $52 million loss. That change alone illustrates how much last year’s mega-films inflated the quarter and how challenging it was for this year’s titles to match them.

Fantastic Four Box Office Flop: Bombs With $38.7M - 67% Drop

Theatrical Decline Dragged Down Segment Results

The Entertainment segment’s overall numbers reflect a clear downturn in theatrical strength. Even though Disney released several films for the quarter, including Fantastic Four, The Roses, Freakier Friday, and the carry-over from Lilo & Stitch, none approached the cultural or financial footprint of Deadpool & Wolverine or Inside Out 2. Those films dominated 2024’s box office and provided a windfall that wasn’t replicated in 2025.

This drop shows why Entertainment fell 35 percent even though streaming looked stronger. Disney+ and Hulu added subscribers and improved income, but many of those gains came from wholesale deals like Charter that padded the numbers without adding real revenue. The boost wasn’t nearly enough to make up for the steep theatrical decline.

Fantastic Four Leak: Julia Garner Silver Surfer / Galactus Transformation Scene

Marvel’s Reboot Era Still Has Work to Do

The Fantastic Four relaunch was expected to reset the franchise for a new generation, but the box office climate is more fragmented, and Marvel’s brand power isn’t what it was a few years ago. Without a major breakout hit in the quarter, the Entertainment segment couldn’t capitalize on the kind of global momentum that drove last year’s figures.

The result is a straightforward year-over-year comparison: 2024 had two of Disney’s biggest theatrical performers in a decade; 2025 did not. Marvel’s Fantastic Four never had a realistic path to matching the numbers posted by Deadpool & Wolverine, and the Entertainment division’s decline reflects exactly that.

Making matters tougher, Disney has no Marvel film on the schedule until Avengers: Doomsday in December 2026. The company is now leaning on this year’s Avatar: Fire and Ash to turn things around.

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