'Thor: Love and Thunder' hopes to jolt a rebounding theater industry

Two years ago, movie theaters were suffering through the pandemic and many in Hollywood wondered if going to the movies would become a thing of the past.

Now, halfway through 2022, the reports of the death of theaters appear to be greatly exaggerated. Audiences have returned to the cineplex for hits like "Top Gun: Maverick," The Batman" and "Minions: The Rise of Gru" and there's hope in Hollywood that these films are the rule, not the exception, for the rest of the year.

Theaters should get hit with another bolt of lightning this weekend when "Thor: Love and Thunder," Marvel's latest film, hits cineplexes. Starring Chris Hemsworth and Natalie Portman as the God(s) of Thunder, it is projected to have a debut of $150 million in North America. The film made a strong $29 million on Thursday night.

"Theaters have seen a renaissance of sorts this year with traditional blockbusters — sequels, superheroes and slasher pics — leading the box office brigade," Jeff Bock, senior analyst at entertainment research firm Exhibitor Relations, told CNN Business.

Yet despite the optimism, the industry is still not completely back. Streaming remains a powerful alternative, inflation is squeezing disposable income and the second half of 2022 has a dearth of potential blockbusters.

The domestic box office has made nearly $4 billion so far this year, according to Comscore (SCOR). That total is up 243% over the same time last year, but 33% lower than 2019's pre-pandemic levels.

This year's box office numbers present a "Choose Your Own Adventure" of sorts. Being down 33% could be seen as disappointing, but it could also be viewed as a success considering the last two years.

The biggest film of the year so far, in which Tom Cruise reprises one of his most iconic roles from the 1986 classic, has brought in $575 million in North America — or roughly 15% of this year's entire domestic box office.  

That's excellent news for the industry, but should one movie represent that much of the domestic box office? Bock called "Maverick" a "box office anomaly that happens maybe once every decade."

There have been other hits, of course, big moneymakers from franchises such as Marvel's "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness" and Universal's "Jurassic World: Dominion" as well as unexpected upstarts like A24's trippy "Everything Everywhere All At Once," which has made close to $70 million domestically despite being a smaller, low-budget film.