BEIJING, 1 December 2025 — The latest sequel from Walt Disney Company, Zootopia 2, has delivered a blockbuster debut in China, taking in approximately US$272 million in its opening weekend in the mainland. That haul makes it the largest animated foreign-film opening ever in China and positions Disney for a strong year-end in the Asian box-office.
Why this matters in Asia
- China’s film market has been under pressure: post-pandemic cinema attendance has lagged expectations, and Hollywood imports have struggled to consistently break through. Zootopia 2’s strong performance thus signals a potential turning point.
- For Disney, the China win is strategically important: the company has invested heavily in localisation (including a dedicated Zootopia theme land at Shanghai Disneyland) and marketing tailored to Chinese audiences.
- For Asian investors and entertainment-industry watchers, this underscores how the licensing, themed-experience and IP play in Greater China remain critical to global media companies.
- The number also has broader implications: when a film can launch so strongly in China, it affects decisions on release windows, marketing spend, localisation, and merchandising throughout the region.
Key take-aways for your readers
- China still has blockbuster potential: Despite recent headwinds, when the right film hits, the numbers can be enormous. For Zootopia 2, the scale of the debut hints at latent demand for well-executed family entertainment.
- IP + localisation = traction: The original Zootopia built a strong Chinese fanbase (earning ~US$236 million in its China run) and Disney’s decision to localise heavily appears to have paid off this time.
- Regional ripple effects: Success in China often means better merchandising, theme-park tie-ins, streaming/international rights, and spin-offs. Companies operating in Southeast Asia or collaborating with Disney (licensing, theme parks, animation) may benefit from the momentum.
- Watch the sustainability: While the debut is impressive, sustaining the box-office through word-of-mouth, allowing for a strong run (not just an opening) is critical. Cinema owners, theatres in China and the region will be watching closely.
Risk points and what to monitor
- Local competition: Chinese domestic films still dominate many weeks. Imported titles face quotas, censorship and shifting consumer tastes.
- Backbone of the numbers: The US$272 million is a weekend opening figure. If drop-off is steep, the total run may still fall short of expectations.
- Regional spill-over: While China is the focus, results in other Asian markets (Japan, Southeast Asia, India) matter for full monetisation of the IP.
- Theme-park / merch execution: The full value of the franchise in Asia depends on ancillary streams (theme park visits, branded goods, follow-on content) which have longer-term risk / reward.














