Preview:
- ‘Inside Out 2’ has become the second-highest animated launch at the domestic box office.
- It’s also a hit internationally.
- The movie continues the story of anthropomorphic emotions in a girl’s head.
After a few months boasting little in the way of happiness at the box office (‘Dune: Part Two’ and ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire’ have been bright spots, but milder ones), and some big disappointments (‘Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga’ led a shockingly low Memorial Day weekend, the summer movie season kicking off with a whimper), we finally have something to properly celebrate.
‘Inside Out 2’, the latest release from Disney/Pixar, has finally hit with both critics and audiences, launching to impressive figures.
“Make room for new emotions.”
77
1 hr 37 minJun 10th, 2024
Teenager Riley’s mind headquarters is undergoing a sudden demolition to make room for something entirely unexpected: new Emotions! Joy, Sadness, Anger, Fear and… Read the Plot
How has ‘Inside Out 2’ performed at the box office?
The new Pixar sequel smashed expectations (Disney was projecting closer to $90 million), with $155 million in its first weekend, the highest opening since ‘Barbie’ last summer (Greta Gerwig’s movie opened to $162 million).
Without adjusting for inflation, that marks the second-highest domestic opening for an animated movie (behind the company’s ‘Incredibles 2’ in 2018) and put it far beyond the first ‘Inside Out’, which opened to $90 million.
Garnering good scores from critics and audiences, the new movie also did well overseas, taking in $140 million, enough to surpass ‘Frozen II’ ($135 million and yes, another Disney effort) as the biggest overseas animated opening of all time.
Globally, the movie has kicked off its run with $295 million.
What’s the story of ‘Inside Out 2’?
The movie follows up from the original by revisiting the emotions in Riley’s (Kensington Tallman) head. We’re back with Joy (Amy Poehler), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Fear (Tony Hale, replacing Bill Hader), Anger (Lewis Black) and Disgust (Liza Lapira, replacing Mindy Kaling), who have gotten into a good groove guiding and reacting to the life of their tween charge.
But they’re rudely awakened one night by the Puberty alarm, and even more disturbed by a work crew arriving to demolish the control center, preparing to rebuild it to accommodate some new emotions, including Anxiety (Maya Hawke), Embarrassment (Paul Walter Hauser), Envy (Ayo Edebiri) and Ennui (Adèle Exarchopoulos).
Soon, the new emotions are taking over running Riley’s life as she deals with new challenges and concerns, while the original crew are left bottled up in the back of her mind. Can they make their way back to figure out how to balance things out?
Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Inside Out 2’
Will there be an ‘Inside Out 3’?
Unlike the end of ‘Inside Out’, which teased the possibility of a further story –– the idea of the Riley character hitting puberty, which indeed was picked up here –– ‘Inside Out 2’ post-credit sequence is largely dedicated to revisiting a joke from midway in the movie.
There is, of course, plenty of material to tackle with other life stages for Riley, but few of them would seem to be particularly family friendly. Still, with the huge success of this new movie, expect Disney bosses to at least ask Team Pixar to explore options.
Where next for the summer movie season?
This is obviously a reason to hope that audiences are finally embracing theatrical moviegoing again and with any luck, the likes of ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ and the new ‘Despicable Me 4’ will keep the cash truck rolling.