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‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Passes ‘Avengers’ as Ninth-Highest Grossing Movie
Tom Cruise is traveling earlier Earth’s Mightiest Heroes. Paramount’s supersonic blockbuster “Top Gun: Maverick” has grossed $623.8 million in North The us, overtaking “The Avengers” ($623.3 million) to grow to be the ninth-optimum grossing movie in domestic box business office history. Industry gurus imagine the movie has more than enough fuel in its tank to sooner or later move the titles in seventh and eighth location, “Titanic” with $659 million and “Jurassic World” with $653 million. For these counting, the prime 6 slots belong to “Star Wars: The Pressure Awakens” ($936.6 million), “Avengers: Endgame” ($858.3 million), “Spider-Person: No Way Home” ($804.7 million), “Avatar” ($760 million), “Black Panther” ($700 million) and…
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No Way Home Now the 6th Highest Grossing Movie of All Time
Spider-Man: No Way Home has passed the $1.69 billion mark at the global box office to become the sixth highest grossing movie of all time. Spider-Man: No Way Home has enjoyed huge box office success to become the sixth highest grossing movie of all time. Starring Tom Holland in the lead, the movie marks the third installment of the Spider-Man: Homecoming series, as well as the seventh appearance of the character in the MCU. Holland’s Spidey was last seen in a mid-credits cameo in Venom: Let There Be Carnage, with his last featured role coming in 2019’s Spider-Man: Far From Home, the last movie of the MCU’s Phase 3. The Spider-Man franchise…
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No Way Home Becomes Sony’s Highest Grossing Movie Ever at US Box Office
Spider-Man: No Way Home is approaching a 10-day domestic gross of $478 million, which will make it Sony’s best-performing U.S. film in history. Spider-Man: No Way Home has now swung all the way to the top of Sony’s list of their highest-grossing movies of all time. The film, which is the fourth entry in Phase 4 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, is the third solo Spider-Man film starring Tom Holland. These films were created by Marvel in conjunction with Sony, who still owns the rights to the character and first struck a deal with the Disney-owned studio to allow him to make his MCU debut in 2016’s Captain America: Civil War. Although it has…