Disney’s latest live-action remake has encountered an unexpectedly difficult start, raising fresh questions about the studio’s long-running strategy of reimagining animated classics.
Despite drawing on one of its most successful modern franchises, the film struggled to match the momentum of earlier remakes, fueling debate over audience demand, franchise fatigue, and whether Disney’s once-dominant formula is beginning to lose its theatrical appeal.
A Disappointing Debut
Disney’s live-action Moana opened to just $43 million domestically, delivering one of the weakest debuts ever for the studio’s modern remake strategy. The result immediately fell short of expectations for a film carrying blockbuster ambitions and placed renewed attention on Disney’s reliance on reimagining its animated classics. With an enormous production budget and significant marketing investment, the remake now faces an uphill climb to achieve profitability.
A Costly Gamble
The disappointing opening is particularly significant because of the film’s reported $250 million production budget, a figure that excludes an estimated global marketing campaign exceeding $100 million. Given that movie theaters keep a substantial share of ticket revenue, analysts believe the film will need a massive worldwide box office run simply to break even, making its opening weekend especially concerning for Disney.
Nostalgia Never Arrived
Unlike Disney’s biggest remake successes, Moana lacked the benefit of long-term nostalgia. Films such as Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King returned to theaters decades after their original releases, allowing multiple generations to rediscover beloved stories together. Moana, however, reached theaters only ten years after the original animated film, leaving far less time for audiences to develop the same nostalgic attachment.
Too Soon
The franchise also remained unusually fresh in the public’s mind. Less than two years earlier, Moana 2 had become a major theatrical success, while both animated films continued attracting millions of viewers on Disney+. With the original story readily available at home and a recent sequel still familiar to families, many moviegoers appeared to have little urgency to purchase tickets for another version of the same adventure.
Summer Competition
Release timing created another major obstacle. Disney launched Moana during one of the busiest stretches of the summer movie season, forcing it to compete directly with several high-profile family releases. Universal’s Minions & Monsters continued performing strongly in its second weekend, while Pixar’s Toy Story 5 had already established itself as one of the year’s biggest worldwide box office hits.
Families Had Choices
Competition extended beyond individual films. Families had already spent heavily on multiple theatrical outings within only a few weeks, making Moana one more expensive entertainment option in an already crowded marketplace. With premium screens divided among several major releases and audiences forced to prioritize their spending, Disney’s remake struggled to stand out despite the popularity of its source material.
Critics Were Unimpressed
Critical reception also weighed on the film’s performance. While audiences awarded Moana a solid A– CinemaScore, reviewers proved far less enthusiastic, leaving the remake with a 36 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes. Many critics argued that the production remained too faithful to the original animated feature and failed to introduce enough meaningful changes to justify revisiting a story audiences already knew.
The "Photocopy" Criticism
Several reviews described the remake as a «sluggish, $250 million photocopy», arguing that Disney recreated the original without expanding its themes, characters, or musical arrangements in meaningful ways. Other critics questioned the visual approach, suggesting that realistic CGI interpretations of colorful animated characters reduced much of the imagination and charm that helped make the 2016 film a modern Disney classic.
Financial Pressure Builds
The opening weekend has intensified concerns about the movie’s financial outlook. Industry analysts generally estimate that studios receive only about half of worldwide ticket sales after exhibitors take their share, meaning Moana will require exceptional international results and sustained attendance over the coming weeks to offset its enormous production and marketing costs.
Comparisons With Lilo & Stitch
The contrast with Disney’s live-action Lilo & Stitch has become difficult to ignore. Released in 2025 with a smaller production budget, that remake debuted to approximately $146 million domestically, more than triple Moana’s opening weekend. The comparison has fueled debate over whether Disney underestimated franchise fatigue by revisiting Moana so quickly after the success of its animated sequel.
Questions for Disney
Although international markets and future weekends could still improve the film’s overall performance, Moana has already become an important test of Disney’s remake strategy. The disappointing debut is likely to influence future decisions about release schedules, franchise spacing, and the level of creative reinvention audiences now expect when beloved animated classics are adapted into live-action blockbusters.