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‘The Little Mermaid’ might have won the first battle against review-bombers, but it could still lose the box office war

One big weekend doesn't tell the whole story.

the little mermaid
Image via Disney

Having emerged victorious in the opening battle against trolls and review-bombers everywhere by scoring the highest-ever Rotten Tomatoes audience approval rating for a live-action Disney remake, you’d have thought it’s nothing but plain sailing from here for The Little Mermaid.

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Admittedly, Rob Marshall’s deep sea adventure did get a helping hand from a number of aggregation sites across the world after a rogue band of keyboard warriors mobilized to try to chip away at its rating, but a massive opening weekend north of $100 million did at least prove that the majority of people who claim to hate The Little Mermaid didn’t bother paying for a ticket.

Screengrab via YouTube

Then again, the ticket sales outside of the United States were disappointing to put it lightly, with overseas earnings accounting for less than $70 million. By comparison, recent blockbusters Fast X and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 netted $168 million and and $251 million respectively outside of home soil, which could indicate that The Little Mermaid might be in danger of posting a loss when all is said and done.

With an estimated budget of $250 million plus the additional marketing and distribution costs, there’s a chance the popular do-over could need to reach at least $700 million globally before it can even consider turning a profit, and it goes without saying that week-to-week grosses outside of domestic shores very rarely tend to increase as more time passes.

It’s all a touch on the doom and gloom side, then, but that doesn’t mean The Little Mermaid is guaranteed to be the Mouse House’s latest money-making monster.

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