
Disney's 'Lilo & Stitch' becomes Hollywood's first $1-billion movie of 2025
The movie, based on the 2002 animated film of the same name, made $416.2 million in the U.S. and Canada and an additional $584.8 million internationally. It is the highest-grossing Disney live-action film ever in Mexico, where it brought in $67 million.
'We knew there was a lot of love for 'Lilo & Stitch' with audiences around the world, yet we never take that for granted," Disney Entertainment co-Chairman Alan Bergman said in a statement. "We're proud of how this new film has connected with people."
The Burbank-based media and entertainment giant has already announced that a sequel to "Lilo & Stitch" is in development.
The movie was released on May 23 and hauled in $183 million domestically during its opening weekend, a total that edged out 2022's "Top Gun: Maverick" to claim the mantle of biggest Memorial Day weekend opener ever.
Read more: The first 'Lilo & Stitch' wasn't a blockbuster. Disney's remake might be one of the year's biggest
The original animated movie was only a modest box-office performer at the time, bringing in $273 million. Yet over time, Stitch has become increasingly popular, ranking in the top 10 bestselling Disney franchises, alongside stalwarts like Mickey and Minnie Mouse, the princesses, Star Wars and Marvel, Disney has said.
Sales of Stitch-themed merchandise totaled about $2.6 billion last year. And before the new film was released, the 'Lilo & Stitch' franchise, which includes animated series, TV films and direct-to-video movies, drove 546 million hours of global viewership on Disney+, with the original movie accounting for more than half of that.
Bergman said in May that the popularity of the little blue alien "definitely" played a role in greenlighting the live-action film.
The success of "Lilo & Stitch" comes as family-friendly movies have ruled the box office. The momentum began in April with Warner Bros. Pictures' "A Minecraft Movie," which has now made $955 million worldwide, and continued with "Lilo & Stitch" and Universal Pictures' live-action adaptation "How to Train Your Dragon," which released in June and collected more than $564 million globally.
"Lilo & Stitch" is just the most recent Disney film to cross the $1-billion mark. Last year, Disney and Pixar's animated "Inside Out 2," Walt Disney Animation's "Moana 2" and Marvel Studios' "Deadpool & Wolverine" each made $1 billion in global box office revenue.
Globally, the biggest film of the year remains "Ne Zha 2," a Chinese animated juggernaut that grossed more than $2 billion in ticket sales, the vast majority of which came from its home country.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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Yahoo Canada Eh Listers: Carolina Bartczak (Danny Taillon) Carolina Bartczak played Taylor Kitsch's wife in the Netflix series Painkiller, starred alongside James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, Jennifer Lawrence, and Nicholas Hoult in X-Men: Apocalypse, and now leads the CBC series Plan B for Season 3. The Polish-Canadian actor comes from a family of engineers, but she didn't love studying biochemistry in Toronto, and an invitation to be on a TV redecorating show was a starting point for her to look into working for production companies. "I was working at a production company in Montreal. ... I was watching auditions come in, I just thought, damn, that looks so fun," Bartczak recalled to Yahoo Canada. "But I've never known anyone who's an actor. I never had any contact with [anyone in the industry] and I just thought, ... I'm going to die one day and I might as well take a big swing. ... And if it goes nowhere, cool, as long as I tried." 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Advertisement "Among us actors, we always talk about the crash down to real life, and you come off of a high and you're feeling great for a week, and then it's just down. So that's something that you learn as you go along, that you have to take care of your mental health. And I plan a lot of physical exercise, I plan seeing friends to make sure that I can get through that difficult comedown." Bartczak spoke to her X-Men: Apocalypse costar, Rose Byrne, about pushing against being typecast, vying for roles people wouldn't necessarily associate with a particular actor. "From the beginning of my career I have been cast as a mom. I guess I have mom energy," Bartczak said. "I remember actually speaking to Rose Byrne about this when we were shooting X-Men, she was like, I couldn't get a job on a comedy. She was like, everyone saw me as the girl from Damages and they couldn't possibly imagine that I could be funny. And so she had to break through walls to get an audition for Bridesmaids. ... 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"I understand them needing to bring in the star power for financing, and I think ... the answer is to educate them that we have very skilled and very talented people in Canada who can take those acting parts, or key hair or key design. ... I think the more productions work here the more they will feel comfortable with the level of professionalism that we have here." Painkiller — 2023 A project that was particularly impactful for Bartczak was working on the Netflix series Painkiller, a fictionalized series based on the American opioid epidemic, including the actions by Purdue Pharma and Richard Sackler in the rise of OxyContin misuse in the U.S. Directed by Peter Berg, Bartczak played Lily Kryger, whose husband Glen (Taylor Kitsch) becomes addicted to OxyContin after being prescribed the drug for an injury. "Because we had all done our research, we all came with this body of sense memory and images, and so I feel like we came and built this fully formed story," Bartczak said. "And also, because it's a true story, ... I heard often from people on set [who knew someone who] died of an opioid overdose. So it was also finding that nuance and respecting the people that actually had gone through some of these tragedies." Advertisement "The subject matter is very complex and I feel like it's going to be one of those stories where we're going to be discovering new facts about it as we go along. ... I thought [Peter Berg] did an amazing job at balancing the macro story as well as the micro story, but not just making tragedy porn out of it. Not just making it about the sadness and the unfairness. He wanted to make it entertaining so that people were more likely to watch it and be able to see the whole story. ... Casting Matthew Broderick as Richard Sackler I thought was brilliant, and making it really quirky and weird, but then having this whole separate drama happen with this family in a small town, I thought that was really clever." This was another reunion project for Berg and Taylor Kitsch, who famously started working together on Friday Night Lights in the 2000s, and have continued to collaborate on multiple projects since. "I get the impression that they're siblings. They argue and they fight and they love each other. So that was really fun," Bartczak said. But in playing the wife to Kitsch's character on the series, Bartczak really wanted to ensure that they were able to authentically capture the couple's relationship. Advertisement "I forced Peter Berg to give me Taylor's contact information, because I knew that we were going to be stepping onto set playing a couple that has been married for 15 years and has a child together, and that requires a certain amount of comfort between two people," Bartczak said. "And so I didn't want to be meeting him on the first day." "I was able to get in touch with Taylor and have dinner and talk about our characters and their relationship, and how they ended up here and how they're going to end up there, which I think really allowed us to sell our marriage and romantic relationship very well. ... I'm always most afraid ... that people don't buy the relationship, because if you don't buy the relationship, then you can't care about the story." Plan B — 2025 In Season 3 of the CBC hit Plan B Bartczak plays Abigail Walker, a TV morning show host who faces the tragic loss of her teenage daughter Lucy (Arianna Shannon) to suicide. Desperate to save her daughter, Abigail looks to the Plan B agency to travel back in time to hopefully change Lucy's life. None of the characters in Plan B was crafted as "good or evil," and this appealed to Bartczak. "They're just quite holistically human. They have their character flaws. They have their character traits that are good, the ones that are bad, and they're good people who are trying their best and making mistakes along the way, which is kind of how I see life," she said. "You're just doing your best and you're making mistakes along the way, and hoping that none of the mistakes are permanent. And that's what I really liked about the writing, is that it was very nuanced, and everyone was likeable in moments, and everyone was hate-able in moments. And when someone's trying their best, it's easier to forgive them as an audience member." Easily the most moving and heartbreaking moment in Plan B is seeing how Bartczak portrayed Abigail finding out her daughter is dead, with the character in complete shock. "I found that reaction quite jarring when I first read the script and thought, why isn't she reacting the way I think she's going to react? And I think we've just been so used to, on television there's a tragedy and the person breaks down into tears and has their emotional outburst. Whereas from the research that I did, more often than not, the tragedy is so great that their brain actually can't handle all the information, because it would just shut them down. So they almost put a little blinder on in order to slowly absorb the tragedy, which I thought was so brilliant in the show," Bartczak said. "Her ex husband, Nick, and her son are so emotional as people, and vulnerable, that when they see the tragedy they're able to react. But she's so tough and impermeable that she can't actually deal with the tragedy until she can break it down in her head." There's also an interesting element to Abigail where she's someone who does so much for people outside her immediate family, particularly women, including being a sounding board for discussions around their mental health, but it wasn't the same in her relationship with her own daughter. "I thought a lot about that. ... We are the least forgiving to the people that are closest to us, and the least forgiving to ourselves, and it's easier to have a kind word for someone who is not in your inner circle," Bartczak said. "I don't know why human beings are like that, but she's unforgiving to herself, and she's very strict with Lucy, but then goes to her women's group and is so generous, and it's such a contradiction." "And that's the writing of Plan B, is that all these people are contradictions. They're not one way or another, they're not angels and they're not demons. They are both. And part of Abigail's journey in the show is to be able to bring that vulnerability into her family." Carolina Bartczak in Plan B on CBC (DANNY TAILLON) While she has taken on many different roles in her career, from a Smurfs character to the complexity of Abigail in Plan B, Bartczak still wants to try her hand in a big action role. "I want to be a spy. I want to learn how to shoot a fake gun on screen. I would love to do some kind of action thing," Bartczak said. "That's on my bucket list."