‘Superman’ Soars in U.S., Stumbles Overseas: David Zaslav Celebrates, Touting DCU’s “Bold Ten-Year Plan” — World of Reel

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For a weekend, at least, David Zaslav gets to breathe. The Warner Bros CEO has released a statement celebrating this weekend’s “Superman” box-office.

“Three years ago, I hired James Gunn and Peter Safran to reimagine and unify the creative direction of DC under one leadership team,” Zaslav said in the statement. “James and Peter’s commitment to honoring the legacy of the DC Universe while forging something new is inspired.”

“Superman is just the first step,” Zaslav added. “Over the next year alone, DC Studios will introduce the films Supergirl and Clayface in theaters and the series Lanterns on HBO Max, all part of a bold ten-year plan. ”

And yet, despite a $217M global debut that falls short of blockbuster expectations, “Superman” has landed in a grey zone that lets both its critics and supporters walk away feeling validated.

Domestically, the film soared with $122M — enough to affirm James Gunn’s fresh take on the DCU — but the softer international turnout highlights the lingering challenge of launching a truly global superhero franchise. A red flag for a franchise that needs to play on the global stage to justify its blockbuster budget and long-term ambitions.

In markets like China, Latin America, and parts of Europe, Superman underperformed compared to both pre-release tracking and prior DC films. For comparison, “The Batman” opened to $258M globally with a more muted U.S. rollout, showing stronger overseas interest.

And so, supporters can point to the strong U.S. opening as proof that audiences are buying into Gunn’s vision for a rebooted DCU, while critics can cite the lukewarm international performance as a sign that Superman’s global pull might make it hard for the film to break even.

Regardless, the DCU will move forward; Superman did enough to keep the lights on. Everyone wins — just not in the way they hoped.