All Topics
All Topics
Technology
Technology
Design
Design
Programming
Programming
Science
Science
News
News
Gaming
Gaming
Entertainment
Entertainment
Business
Business
Finance
Finance
Sports
Sports
Health
Health
Food
Food
Travel
Travel
Art
Art
Music
Music
Books
Books
Education
Education
Politics
Politics
Personal
Personal
Bluesky
Twitter
No algorithm. No AI slop. No ads. Just RSS. Pro-human. Indie writers. Real journalism. Open web. Chronological. Hand toasted.

'The Devil Wears Prada 2' Pushes Franchise Past $1 Billion at Global Box Office

By

Rebecca Rubin

11h ago· 2 min readenNews

FeedBagel synthesis

· 2 sources

"The Devil Wears Prada 2" has pushed the two-film franchise past the $1 billion mark at the global box office, with the sequel grossing $676 million worldwide in its seventh week, according to Variety. Deadline reported that the sequel, produced for $100 million, has earned $217.9 million domestically, while the original 2006 film brought in $326.5 million. Variety noted that Disney spent roughly $100 million to produce and $80 million to market the sequel, which opened in early May and is expected to turn a tidy profit.

Summary

"The Devil Wears Prada 2" has grossed $676 million at the global box office, pushing the two-film franchise past the $1 billion milestone. Combined with the original 2004 film's $326 million haul (not adjusted for inflation), the franchise has crossed this notable threshold with just two films. Disney, which spent roughly $100 million to produce and $80 million to market the sequel, is expected to turn a tidy profit. The sequel opened in early May.

Key quotes

· 3 pulled
A billion dollars? During summer movie season? Groundbreaking.
It's a notable milestone to cross with just two films, especially in post-COVID times.
Disney, which spent roughly $100 million to make and $80 million to market the second "Prada," will turn a tidy profit.
Snippet from the RSS feed
"The Devil Wears Prada 2" has grossed $676 million at the global box office, propelling the franchise past the $1 billion mark.

You might also wanna read