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For example, in 1970, tickets cost $1.55 or about $6.68 in inflation-adjusted 2004 dollars; by 1980, prices had risen to about $2.69, a drop to $5.50 in inflation-adjusted 2004 dollars. [24] Ticket prices have also risen at different rates of inflation around the world, further complicating the process of adjusting worldwide grosses. [22]
This is a list of the highest-grossing films in the U.S. and Canada. [3] The chart is ranked by lifetime gross, and for comparison, the figures adjusted for the effects of inflation are also listed, using the U.S. consumer price index; [4] a film's earnings from its initial release are also included to provide a basis for comparison between films released around the same time.
Most expensive films adjusted for inflation Rank Title Year Cost (est.) (millions) Refs and notes Adjusted Nominal 1 Star Wars: The Force Awakens: 2015 $575 * $447 [1] [nb 1] 2 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom: 2018 $524 * $432 [2] [nb 2] 3 Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides: 2011 $513 * $379 [4] [nb 3] 4 Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker ...
Warner Bros. Adjusted gross: $922,397,100. Unadjusted gross: $232,906,145. The '70s horror film about a young girl who is possessed is widely regarded as the best in the genre.
The list is limited to films that are potentially among the highest box-office losses, adjusted for inflation (approximately upper-bound losses of $100 million or higher as of 2023). † Background shading indicates films playing in the week commencing 14 February 2025 in theaters around the world .
Included on the list are charts of the top box-office earners, a chart of high-grossing animated films adjusted for inflation. Animated family films have performed consistently well at the box office, with Disney films enjoying lucrative re-releases prior to the home video era.
The Extra-Terrestrial (1982): Adjusted for inflation, it's still Spielberg's biggest hit (and the fourth-biggest hit of all time), but it doesn't feel like a blockbuster: It feels, instead ...
The top ten British productions adjusted for inflation are all international co-productions, and—with the exception of Mamma Mia and Beauty and the Beast—are all Star Wars, James Bond and Harry Potter films. If the criterion is restricted to solely British-produced films, The King's Speech is the most successful British production. [42]