‘Superman’ Has An Imminent Streaming Release Date, Raising Questions

We are in a strange time in the world of theatrical releases and their relationship to streaming. You want movies to do well at the box office, but you also need to get more eyeballs on them for streaming rentals, purchases or engagement with your platform. Now, that’s happening with Superman, and its newly reported streaming date is eyebrow-raising.
Streaming tracker WhentoStream, accurate at predicting things like this, has sources that have told it that Superman will hit streaming on August 26, 2025. That’s just a 45 days window since the movie’s release on July 11, very, very much on the shorter side of this kind of thing. And it’s just about two weeks from today. To be clear, this is a paid release on platforms like Amazon Prime Video, where you’ll have to pay $20-25 to rent or buy it, most likely. It will be months later until it shows up on WB’s HBO Max.
Is this report of 45 days too short to be real? Likely not. This past year alone we had a just 60 day window for rival superhero feature Captain America: Brave New World. And if we’re doing DC, the final DCEU film, Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, arrived on streaming just 32 days after it was in theaters.
On the one hand, you can see the idea. Superman has made $565 million at the global box office since it released about a month ago, and it’s starting to slow way down. Last weekend it was in fourth place behind Fantastic Four, The Bad Guys 2 and The Naked Gun. Now it will be lower with Weapons releasing and having a solid opening weekend. So with the box office drying out, the window might make sense.
On the other hand, if you keep doing this with your blockbusters, all it does is say to your audience that they really don’t need to go to theaters each time one of these comes out if they can just wait a few weeks or at worst, a couple months until they can either rent it at home or watch is on a subscription service they already have. The MCU in particular has been said to suffer from this phenomena in recent years. Sure, you might show up for a monster like Spider-Man: No Way Home? But The Marvels? Thunderbolts? If you’re just vaguely interested, you might not bother and just wait until it’s on D+ in short order.
If the DCU starts doing the same thing with very, very short windows, it could end up hurting the overall box office. Half a billion dollars is great, obviously, but it also stands to reason that Superman may be the DCU’s biggest movie out of many projects to come, from Supergirl to Clayface, and we might get the “wait for streaming” plan for those too. But we’ll have to wait and see.
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