Today, Disney/Pixar’s Toy Story 3 is expected to cross the $1 billion box office mark in global grosses. The film is already the world’s largest animated release of all time and the 7th biggest motion picture. That makes Disney the first studio in history to release two $1 billion films in a single year. Its Alice In Wonderland is the 5th biggest title in global box office history after taking $1.0243 billion in worldwide grosses. Of course, both films were 3D and able to charge higher ticket prices.
UPDATE: Here is the Disney news release –
BURBANK, Calif. – August 27, 2010 – Two weeks after becoming the highest-grossing animated film of all time, Disney•Pixar’s Toy Story 3 will cross the $1 billion mark at the global box office today, joining Alice in Wonderland as the second $1 billion film this year from The Walt Disney Studios – the first studio in history to accomplish this feat. Disney first crossed the $1 billion threshold with Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest in 2006. Toy Story 3 becomes the only animated film to reach this milestone and the seventh title in industry history.
“It’s been an incredible year as we saw the Pixar team bring Buzz and Woody back to the big screen and watched Tim Burton’s vision for Alice in Wonderland take the world by storm,” said Rich Ross, Chairman, The Walt Disney Studios. “These box office triumphs prove that creative storytelling brought to life by imaginative, inspired and talented professionals is something audiences respond to the world over.”
As of Thursday (8/26/10), Toy Story 3 tallied more than $592.9 million internationally, Disney’s largest international animated release. Latin American audiences have contributed $138 million making Toy Story 3 the highest grossing Disney film ever released in the region. Toy Story 3 is the most successful UK release in Disney history and currently stands as the fourth biggest title in territory history with $102.4 million in box office receipts so far. In Japan, the film has taken in $111.2 million and spent five consecutive weeks as the #1 movie. Toy Story 3 currently ranks as the #7 film in global box office history and domestically ranks #9 with $404.6 million in receipts to date.
Alice in Wonderland began setting records during its opening weekend (March 5-7), becoming the biggest March opening in industry history, the highest 3D opening ever and The Walt Disney Studios’ biggest opening for a non-sequel film. Internationally, the film went on to tally more than $690 million, becoming Disney’s biggest overseas release of all time and the fourth biggest title ever released overseas. Worldwide, the film took in $1.0243 billion, ranking it as the #5 film in global box office history.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.



Congrats! Toy Story 3 is the best movie this year!!! Hurray for Pixar!!!
of course that’s not counting inflation, right? why is this the only industry that thinks 1983 dollars are the same as 2010 dollars?
Should be number of tickets sold. The 3D tickets make it seem like it’s selling more than it is.
Proving once again that not all movies have to be about cheerleading, rom-coms, bromances, ANYTHING with Jennifer Aniston, Broadway talent competitions, weddings, vampires, or Iraq.
I really feel “Toy Story 3″ deserves a Best Picture nomination . . . and WIN! We could see history at the Oscars this year with the first ever Animated Best Picture Winner, and it’d be extremely well deserved. Has anyone seen another film this year that is as emotional, universal, or compelling as “Toy Story 3″?!
Meaningless. Inflation, the maturation of the international marketplace, and 3D upcharges make comparisons of grosses worthless. The studios need to spare us the breathless hype unless they want to start releasing admissions data instead of grosses. The idea that Alice or TS3 has been seen by anywhere near as many people as blockbusters from years past is laughable.
Too bad neither movie was very good…
Great movie, great news… it’s a pleasure when good movies make the big bucks.
Well, that should at least help them forget about those two Bruckheimer flops.
What I want to know is why this story line, which incorporates so many aspects of the tragedy of the Holocaust as lived by a bunch of toys, is making so much money? Examples: plastic bag travel to nowhere all bunched up (cattle cars), concentration camp where the toys are abused (Auschwitz, Treblinka, etc.), surveillance by scary guards (Nazis), name of owner written on toys (serial number), discussion of hiding in an attic (self-explanatory), making their way to the frightening – all engulfing – incinerator (crematoria) and then all holding hands in terrible resignation just like the victims of the Holocaust probably did. Why is this “just-in-fun” entertainment?? Or is it? Some people are talking about this. As or my own opinion, I think this movie, while very inventive in so many ways, is shockingly insensitive.
Sometimes a crazy, abandoned teddy bear is just a crazy, abandoned teddy bear… not Hitler.
Wow – you need help……….
i think this is great news for Disney, but the last sentence of nikki’s post is the most relevant and put that amount in perspective.
Avatar grossed 2.7 billion. Nuff said.
This quote by Rich Ross is a joke. Let’s give Dick Cook his credit due here. Disney made a big mistake letting him go.
Once again, Pixar can do no wrong (have they made a clinker yet…no!) so as long as the folks in Burbank leave them alone, all will be well. (it’s crazy to imagine that crowd being so hands off but for once, good for them.) irritating that current corporate structure makes it appear that certain people had a hand in this when they didn’t at all. let’s see where we are in a year.