Box Office Mojo quietly updated the final box office for James Gunn’s Superman, and it’s a noticeable change months after the movie’s theatrical run already looked “done.”
The worldwide total is now listed at $624,323,803.
Here’s what Box Office Mojo currently shows:
- Domestic (56.7%): $354,223,803
- International (43.3%): $270,100,000
- Worldwide: $624,323,803

The “extra” money is almost entirely international
Comparing the new totals to the prior numbers:
- Domestic: $354,223,803 vs $354,184,465 = +$39,338
- International: $270,100,000 vs $262,500,000 = +$7,600,000
- Worldwide: $624,323,803 vs $616,684,465 = +$7,639,338
So the “$8M” bump is basically an international adjustment.
And it’s not like nobody noticed. Fan accounts have already been pointing at the Box Office Mojo change as “breaking.”

Late box office updates happen, but the timing raises eyebrows
To be clear, late updates can happen. Sometimes it’s delayed reporting from smaller overseas markets, currency conversion cleanups, or final reconciliations after distributors finish closing out territories.
But the timing is what’s going to get people talking, because the update hits right as Paramount’s Warner Bros. Discovery acquisition becomes the biggest story in town.
So yeah, you’re seeing people connecting the dots.

Superman already showed weak legs overseas
We previously covered the larger issue that Superman’s international run didn’t show the kind of staying power you’d expect if the movie was truly breaking out globally.
A late +$7.6M overseas tweak doesn’t change the bigger read: the overseas split still lands at 43.3% international, which isn’t what you want for the “launch movie” of a long-term DCU plan (backed up by the heads of Netflix and Sony, BTW).

With Paramount taking over WBD, the Gunn DCU exit talk isn’t going away
With Paramount now set to take control of Warner Bros. Discovery, the speculation that Gunn eventually walks from DC Studios is only getting louder.
Even the public commentary around the deal has started leaning into the idea that Gunn won’t want to ride out a corporate takeover scenario.
Whether that happens or not, the optics are what they are: Superman gets a sudden overseas bump on the scoreboard right when the franchise’s corporate future is being reshuffled. What else might Gunn have in his playbook?







