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Oscars 2025: Breaking Down the Box Office Haul of ‘Dune: Part Two,’ ‘Emilia Pérez,’ ‘Wicked,’ and the Best Picture Contenders

Oscars 2025: A Deep Dive into the Box Office Fortunes of ‘Dune: Part Two,’ ‘Emilia Pérez,’ ‘Wicked,’ and the Best Picture Nominees

Oscars 2025: A Deep Dive into the Box Office Fortunes of ‘Dune: Part Two,’ ‘Emilia Pérez,’ ‘Wicked,’ and the Best Picture Nominees

&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpcnt">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpa">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<span class&equals;"wpa-about">Advertisements<&sol;span>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"u top&lowbar;amp">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<amp-ad width&equals;"300" height&equals;"265"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; type&equals;"pubmine"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-siteid&equals;"173035871"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-section&equals;"1">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;amp-ad>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The 97th Academy Awards&comma; set to unfold on March 2&comma; 2025&comma; at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles&comma; aren’t just another glitzy Hollywood affair—they’re a battleground where blockbusters&comma; indie gems&comma; and streaming curveballs slug it out for supremacy&period; This year’s Best Picture lineup is a kaleidoscope of cinematic ambition&colon; from Denis Villeneuve’s sand-scoured sci-fi epic <em>Dune&colon; Part Two<&sol;em> to Jacques Audiard’s genre-bending <em>Emilia Pérez<&sol;em>&comma; and Jon M&period; Chu’s emerald-hued <em>Wicked<&sol;em>&comma; these ten films have lit up screens&comma; stirred debates&comma; and—crucially—faced the unforgiving crucible of the box office&period; With data pulled from NDTV’s recent report &lpar;<a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;ndtv&period;com&sol;entertainment&sol;oscars-2025-dune-part-2-emilia-perez-to-wicked-how-the-best-picture-nominees-fared-at-box-office-7820921&num;pfrom&equals;home-ndtv&lowbar;entertaiment" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noreferrer noopener">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;ndtv&period;com&sol;entertainment&sol;oscars-2025-dune-part-2-emilia-perez-to-wicked-how-the-best-picture-nominees-fared-at-box-office-7820921&num;pfrom&equals;home-ndtv&lowbar;entertaiment<&sol;a>&rpar; and cross-checked with Box Office Mojo&comma; let’s unpack how these contenders stacked up commercially&comma; what their numbers reveal about their Oscar prospects&comma; and why this race might be the most unpredictable in years&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Start with the titans&period; <em>Dune&colon; Part Two<&sol;em>&comma; released by Warner Bros&period; on March 1&comma; 2024&comma; didn’t just land—it conquered&period; With &dollar;282&period;1 million domestically and &dollar;714&period;4 million worldwide&comma; Denis Villeneuve’s sequel turned Frank Herbert’s sprawling novel into a box office behemoth&period; Starring Timothée Chalamet as Paul Atreides and Zendaya as Chani&comma; it built on the 2021 original’s &dollar;402 million global haul&comma; proving sci-fi can still pack theaters&period; Its &dollar;190 million budget was a gamble&comma; but one that paid off handsomely—especially when you factor in its five Oscar nods&comma; including Best Picture&comma; Cinematography&comma; and Visual Effects&period; Critics adored it &lpar;92&percnt; on Rotten Tomatoes&rpar;&comma; and audiences followed&comma; drawn by its jaw-dropping visuals and IMAX-ready scope&period; Yet&comma; history suggests sci-fi rarely clinches the top prize—<em>The Shape of Water<&sol;em> &lpar;2017&rpar; was an outlier—so its Oscar night might lean toward technical wins rather than the big one&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Now shift gears to <em>Wicked<&sol;em>&comma; the emerald juggernaut that’s rewriting the rules for movie musicals&period; Directed by Jon M&period; Chu and unleashed by Universal Pictures on November 22&comma; 2024&comma; it’s raked in &dollar;472&period;8 million domestically and &dollar;717&period;9 million worldwide as of late February 2025&period; With a &dollar;150 million budget&comma; this adaptation of the Broadway hit—starring Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba and Ariana Grande as Glinda—has defied gravity&comma; outpacing even <em>Dune&colon; Part Two<&sol;em> globally&period; Its 10 nominations&comma; including Best Picture&comma; Best Actress for Erivo&comma; and Best Supporting Actress for Grande&comma; make it a Goliath in the race&period; But here’s the catch&colon; musicals have a rocky Oscar track record&period; <em>Chicago<&sol;em> won in 2002&comma; but <em>La La Land<&sol;em> &lpar;2016&rpar; famously stumbled to <em>Moonlight<&sol;em>&period; <em>Wicked<&sol;em>’s populist sheen—think Grande’s 300 million Instagram followers—might dazzle casual viewers&comma; but could it alienate the Academy’s more cerebral voters&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Then there’s <em>Emilia Pérez<&sol;em>&comma; the wild card that’s got everyone talking&period; Jacques Audiard’s Spanish-language musical-crime hybrid&comma; released by Netflix in a limited theatrical run before streaming&comma; doesn’t boast traditional box office stats—Netflix keeps those cards close—but estimates peg its theatrical take in the low single-digit millions&period; What it lacks in ticket stubs&comma; it compensates with prestige&colon; 13 nominations&comma; the most ever for a non-English film&comma; including Best Picture&comma; Best Director&comma; and Best Actress for Karla Sofía Gascón&comma; the first openly trans actor to score an acting nod&period; Shot for &dollar;32 million&comma; it nabbed the Jury Prize at Cannes 2024&comma; splitting critics &lpar;78&percnt; on Rotten Tomatoes&rpar; while electrifying awards chatter&period; Its story—a drug lord’s gender transition—blends melodrama with social heft&comma; but its streaming-first model and divisive tone could cap its Best Picture chances&period; Still&comma; a win would be seismic&colon; a non-English&comma; Netflix-backed triumph on Oscar’s biggest stage&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Next&comma; the mid-tier players&period; James Mangold’s <em>A Complete Unknown<&sol;em>&comma; a Bob Dylan biopic from Searchlight Pictures&comma; hit theaters December 25&comma; 2024&comma; and has grossed &dollar;72&period;9 million domestically and &dollar;75&period;6 million worldwide&period; With Timothée Chalamet channeling the folk icon &lpar;and singing live&comma; no less&rpar;&comma; its &dollar;70 million budget feels justified—especially with eight nominations&comma; including Best Picture and Best Actor&period; It’s not a blockbuster&comma; but its 85&percnt; Rotten Tomatoes score and Chalamet’s post-<em>Dune<&sol;em> heat keep it in contention&period; Edward Berger’s <em>Conclave<&sol;em>&comma; a papal thriller from Focus Features&comma; offers a leaner profile&colon; &dollar;32&period;3 million domestic&comma; &dollar;48&period;8 million worldwide on a &dollar;20 million budget&period; Ralph Fiennes’ steely Cardinal Lawrence earned a Best Actor nod among its eight nominations&comma; and its 91&percnt; critical approval signals sleeper-hit potential&period; Both films strike a balance—accessible yet prestige-driven—that could sway voters in a fractured field&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The indie brigade brings grit to the table&period; Sean Baker’s <em>Anora<&sol;em>&comma; distributed by Neon&comma; has pulled &dollar;15&period;7 million domestically and &dollar;32&period;9 million worldwide since its October 2024 release&period; Shot for &dollar;6 million&comma; this tale of a Brooklyn sex worker &lpar;Mikey Madison&comma; a Best Actress contender&rpar; boasts six nominations and a perfect 100&percnt; on Rotten Tomatoes&period; Its scrappy energy echoes Baker’s <em>The Florida Project<&sol;em>&comma; but its box office ceiling hints at niche appeal&period; Brady Corbet’s <em>The Brutalist<&sol;em> &lpar;A24&rpar; mirrors that trajectory&colon; &dollar;15&period;4 million domestic&comma; &dollar;23&period;1 million worldwide after a limited run grew post-nominations&period; Its &dollar;10 million budget belies its ambition—a 215-minute epic about a Hungarian architect &lpar;Adrien Brody&comma; Best Actor-nominated&rpar;—and its 10 nods mark it as a critical juggernaut &lpar;95&percnt; on Rotten Tomatoes&rpar;&period; These films thrive on acclaim&comma; not scale&comma; but their low grosses could test the Academy’s appetite for underdogs&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Coralie Fargeat’s <em>The Substance<&sol;em> flips the script with body-horror flair&period; Released by Mubi in September 2024&comma; it’s earned &dollar;17&period;4 million domestically and &dollar;23&period;6 million worldwide on a &dollar;17 million budget&period; Demi Moore’s raw turn as an aging star—earning a Best Actress nod among five nominations—has fueled its cult status&period; Think <em>Black Swan<&sol;em> meets <em>The Fly<&sol;em>&comma; with a 90&percnt; Rotten Tomatoes score to match&period; Walter Salles’ <em>I’m Still Here<&sol;em>&comma; Brazil’s entry&comma; clocks in at &dollar;4&period;4 million domestic and &dollar;15&period;8 million worldwide&comma; a smash in its home market&period; Its three nods&comma; including Best Actress for Fernanda Torres&comma; spotlight its political resonance&period; Finally&comma; RaMell Ross’ <em>Nickel Boys<&sol;em> &lpar;Amazon MGM&rpar; scrapes by with &dollar;2&period;7 million domestic and &dollar;3&period;9 million worldwide&period; Its two nominations&comma; including Best Picture&comma; underscore its lyrical power over commercial pull&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">So&comma; what’s the takeaway as March 1&comma; 2025&comma; ticks toward Oscar night&quest; Last year’s <em>Oppenheimer<&sol;em> &lpar;&dollar;975 million worldwide&rpar; and <em>Barbie<&sol;em> &lpar;&dollar;1&period;4 billion&rpar; set a high bar for Best Picture contenders&comma; with <em>Oppenheimer<&sol;em> clinching the crown&period; This year&comma; only <em>Wicked<&sol;em> and <em>Dune&colon; Part Two<&sol;em> breach &dollar;700 million&comma; a stark drop from 2024’s billion-dollar duo&period; The spread—&dollar;717&period;9 million &lpar;<em>Wicked<&sol;em>&rpar; to &dollar;3&period;9 million &lpar;<em>Nickel Boys<&sol;em>&rpar;—shows a field unbound by commercial norms&period; The Academy’s preferential ballot&comma; where voters rank films&comma; often crowns consensus picks over cash cows&period; <em>Wicked<&sol;em>’s glitz might falter like <em>La La Land<&sol;em>’s&semi; <em>Dune<&sol;em> could echo <em>Avatar<&sol;em>’s tech-heavy sweep without the top prize&period; <em>Emilia Pérez<&sol;em> tempts history&comma; but its streaming stigma lingers—Netflix’s <em>Roma<&sol;em> &lpar;2018&rpar; lost to <em>Green Book<&sol;em>&period; <em>Conclave<&sol;em> and <em>A Complete Unknown<&sol;em> offer safe bets&comma; while <em>Anora<&sol;em>&comma; <em>The Brutalist<&sol;em>&comma; and <em>The Substance<&sol;em> could upset if the blockbusters split votes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Context matters too&period; Post-pandemic&comma; theatrical recovery’s uneven—2024’s global box office hit &dollar;32 billion&comma; down from 2019’s &dollar;42 billion &lpar;per Comscore&rpar;&period; <em>Wicked<&sol;em> and <em>Dune<&sol;em> buoyed studios&comma; but <em>Nickel Boys<&sol;em> and <em>I’m Still Here<&sol;em> leaned on festival buzz and streaming&period; Oscar voters&comma; a mix of 10&comma;000&plus; industry pros&comma; often skew older and artsier—favoring <em>The Brutalist<&sol;em>’s gravitas over <em>Wicked<&sol;em>’s razzle-dazzle&period; Yet&comma; the Academy’s diversity push &lpar;33&percnt; new members since 2020 are non-U&period;S&period;&rpar; could lift <em>Emilia Pérez<&sol;em> or <em>I’m Still Here<&sol;em>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">As the red carpet rolls out&comma; catch the action live on ABC or Hulu &lpar;<a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;oscars&period;org&sol;oscars&sol;ceremonies&sol;2025" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noreferrer noopener">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;oscars&period;org&sol;oscars&sol;ceremonies&sol;2025<&sol;a>&rpar;&period; For real-time stats&comma; Box Office Mojo &lpar;<a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;boxofficemojo&period;com" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noreferrer noopener">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;boxofficemojo&period;com<&sol;a>&rpar; is your go-to&period; This isn’t just a race—it’s a referendum on what Hollywood values in 2025&colon; spectacle&comma; substance&comma; or something gloriously in-between&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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