Skip to main content

Armed with new footage, Avengers: Endgame returns to theaters with record in sight

Marvel

With$44 million separating it from the worldwide box office record, Marvel Studios’ Avengers: Endgame is heading back to theaters with new footage.

The studio is clearly hoping to knock current record-holder Avatar out of the top spot and top the James Cameron film’s $2.78 billion run. Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige indicated that the film will return to theaters June 28 with some new footage to reward anyone who helps make it the world’s highest-grossing movie of all time.

Recommended Videos

During a Spider-Man: Far From Home press event, Feige described the extra elements that the re-release of Avengers: Endgame will feature.

“[It’s] not an extended cut, but there will be a version going into theaters with a bit of a marketing push with a few new things at the end of the movie,” he told ScreenRant. “If you stay and watch the movie, after the credits, there’ll be a deleted scene, a little tribute, and a few surprises. Which will be next weekend.”

In re-releasing Endgame to challenge the box-office record books, Marvel is taking a page from the playbook that helped give Cameron the top two films worldwide for most of the last decade.

Both 2009’s Avatar and 1997’s Titanic — the highest-grossing movies of all time, until Endgame along — benefitted from heavily promoted re-releases that brought them back to theaters, with the 2010 re-release of Avatar in a “Special Edition” format offering audiences a few minutes of new footage that weren’t included in the original theatrical run. Titanic was re-released in 2012 in a new, 3D format, and the ticket sales it generated pushed it past the $2 billion mark to join Avatar as the only two movies to cross that threshold up to that point.

Re-releases also helped the original Star Wars trilogy compete with the subsequent prequel and sequel films, with each installment getting a significant bump in total box-office revenue after they returned to theaters in the late 1990s. Smaller films also benefit from re-releases, with many movies debuting in a small number of theaters in order to gauge interest, only to return to theaters after they win awards or generate word-of-mouth buzz.

The re-release strategy isn’t isolated to Hollywood, either.

Video game companies, publishers, and even music studios often re-release popular titles in new editions in the hope of giving their sales numbers a late bump, and given the popularity of Endgame, it seems likely that Marvel’s plan could send the film to the top of the record books. With the worldwide box-office tally for Endgame currently sitting at $2.74 billion, there’s a good chance it could earn the $44 million it needs in just a few weeks if the new footage generates positive conversation.

And if anyone can do it, it’s the Avengers.

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
The 10 most popular movies of all time, ranked by box office gross
The cast of Star Wars.

There are many reasons why a film can become hugely popular. It could be a creative and thrilling story, awe-inspiring and innovative visuals, compelling characters, or enthralling performances from the cast.

But when all these factors come together, they can make a film that resonates with countless audiences and wins even bigger at the box office. While Hollywood has released many worldwide hits over the years, a select few movies hit the exactright mark in theaters, cementing themselves as cinematic juggernauts.

Read more
James Cameron’s sci-fi epic Avatar returns to theaters, but has its magic faded?
Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldana fall in love on Pandora.

There were plenty of reasons to wonder, in the autumn of 2009, if James Cameron had finally flown too close to the sun, burning a big budget on a boondoggle. Nearly a dozen years after emerging from a troubled production with the biggest movie of all time, the disaster-weepie phenomenon Titanic, the blockbuster maestro had once more secured enormous investment in pursuit of a bank-busting special-effects spectacle to rule them all. Except this time, the movie in question looked, from a distance, like the height of overreaching silliness: A sci-fi fantasy about a species of lithe, ocean-blue, vaguely feline aliens, prancing through a tropical paradise. The first trailer prompted chortles. Cameron, however, would have the last laugh.

Avatar, like Titanic before it, did more than silence the skeptics. It vindicated all the grand, hubristic ambition of its creator, at least from a commercial standpoint. Somehow, Cameron had done it again, and unbelievably surpassed the box-office success of his last conquest of the record books. Avatar, a hodgepodge of science fiction tropes in a cutting-edge package, was the big-screen event that everyone had to attend. Globally speaking, it quickly became the biggest movie of all time — a title it lost a decade later to Avengers: Endgame, then won again thanks to a rerelease in Chinaduring the pandemic. Even adjusted for inflation, the movie sits toward the top of the all-time charts.

Read more
Marvel reveals new Avengers movies, Black Panther 2 trailer, and more
marvel sdcc 2022 slate black panther wakanda forever 3

It wouldn't be San Diego Comic-Con without an in-depth look at the MCU. After a comparatively lackluster presentation by rival DC, Marvel unveiled new trailers, new characters, new casting announcements, and new release dates for most (but not all) of its upcoming film and television projects.

First, the Disney+ content. Fans got a closer look at the forthcoming She-Hulk: Attorney at Law series, which stars Tatiana Maslany as the jade giantess who is trying to reconcile her life as a lawyer with her new role as a superhero. Helping her out is her cousin Bruce Banner aka the Hulk, played once again by MCU veteran Mark Ruffalo.

Read more