Thor: Ragnarok's early tracking suggests a domestic opening of $100+/- million on the first weekend of November. The lower-end estimate is perhaps $90 million, with higher-end predictions of $110+ million. Fandango's polling shows Ragnarok as the most anticipated film of the Fall movie season, the film has strong advance ticket sales and overall audience awareness is remarkably high. The trailer is the most-watched of all time for any film by Disney and its associated studios (Marvel, Lucasfilm, and Pixar).
The first Thor had a final 2.7x multiplier, and Thor: The Dark World had a 2.4x final multiplier, meaning the franchise average is roughly a 2.55x multiplier. While I expect Thor: Ragnarok to have a higher multiplier than either of those earlier releases, we also have to realize Ragnarok faces some stiff competition for the same primary demographics, within just a couple of weeks of release -- Justice League opens two weeks later, so Ragnarok only has its first two weekends to itself in that regard. Then the animated Coco arrives a few days later, followed by Star Wars: The Last Jedi and Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle in December. This doesn't mean Ragnarok won't have good legs, just that a runaway marathon performance like Wonder Woman will be much more difficult.
So, using the average multiplier from the past two Thor films, a $100 million North American opening would suggest a final domestic tally of perhaps $250 million for Thor: Ragnarok. That, in turn, would translate into a worldwide total in the range of $500 million to $750 million, depending on whether the international markets' portion of global receipts is more in line with the original Thor movie or its sequel. If we assume a multiplier more like the original film, however, then that 2.7x would take the domestic cume to $270 million and the finale global cume to between $540 million and $810 million.
Source: Marvel Studios
Rachel House as Topaz, Jeff Goldblum as Grandmaster, and Tessa Thompson as Valkyrie in Marvel's "Thor: Ragnarok"
I think a 2.7x multiplier might be very close to the eventual outcome, with 2.8-2.9x my guess for the higher-end. For the actual opening weekend take in North America, I think Ragnarok will play north of $100 million, closer to $110-115 million. That would be a series best for the God of Thunder, and enough to push the final totals conservatively toward about $300+ million domestic and $750+ million worldwide.
Many people are predicting even higher performance for the picture, and I don't rule that out at all. At this point, however, I'm reluctant to fall into the trap of treating every film as a candidate for "can it make $1 billion" discussions. A performance in the $750+ million range would be great, and in fact I think the actual outcome will more likely be $310+ million domestic and $800-850 million worldwide, which gets Thor right to where he needs to be. Anything north of the $800-850 million range is pure gravy.
Again, it's possible the film will play even higher than my bullish estimates here, with $900 million being at least possible. But I am inclined to think we have to remember the series' past reception, the competition the film faces after the first two weeks, and fact a lot of sequels this year wound up performing weakly or at least below more lofty early expectations despite good reviews and seeming audience interest prior to release. There were several films that were part of the "it could make $1 billion" talk throughout the year, including this year's other MCU releases, and while those two Marvel films did big box office and nobody in their right mind could possibly suggest they weren't enormous hits, it drives home the point we need to be more careful about thinking every beloved franchise sequel is a $1 billion contender, or that $1 billion is a bar for success.
Now, why do I think Thor: Ragnarok will play higher than early tracking and finish north of $800 million? Because it's spectacular, and word of mouth will be off the charts. Read on for my full review...