Critics raved about it. Audiences were stunned by its brutal vision. So why is Robert Eggers’ Viking epic, The Northman, widely considered a box office bomb? (The Northman Box Office)
On the surface, the numbers seem puzzling. The film, one of a trilogy of new releases that weekend, had a production budget of around $70-$90 million but grossed just under $70 million worldwide.
The answer reveals the hidden math behind Hollywood hits and explains why simply earning back the cost to make a movie isn’t nearly enough.
The First Hidden Cost: Why a $90M Budget Really Means $180M
Making a movie is one thing; getting people to see it is another. While The Northman had a production budget of around $90 million, that’s only half the story. Studios pour a massive amount of money into a separate marketing budget for everything from TV commercials to billboards. A good rule of thumb in Hollywood is that this marketing spend often equals the entire production budget.
Suddenly, The Northman’s real cost wasn’t $90 million, but closer to $180 million. That gap between its earnings and expenses just became enormous—and it’s not even the final twist in Hollywood accounting.
The Hollywood Twist: Where Does Your Ticket Money Actually Go?
With a total investment of around $180 million, the final hurdle is perhaps the most surprising part of Hollywood economics. When you buy a movie ticket, that money doesn’t all go back to the studio that made the film. It gets split, roughly 50/50, with the movie theater that shows it.
The studio only gets to keep about half of the box office gross. This reality is why industry watchers use a simple rule: a movie generally needs to earn about two to three times its production budget just to break even. To recoup its ~$180 million total investment from only its share of ticket sales, The Northman needed to gross roughly $360 million worldwide.
Compared to that $360 million break-even target, the film’s $69 million global haul tells a much clearer story. This struggle is common for historical epics, which can find it difficult to attract a blockbuster-sized audience. But does this mean the movie was a complete failure? Not exactly.
Beyond the Box Office: Success on Streaming
Where a “box office bomb” headline once seemed like the end of a film’s story, a second life on streaming is changing the narrative of success. A movie’s journey no longer stops when it leaves the cinema, moving the conversation beyond a simple “hit or flop” debate.
The next time you read about a movie’s weekend earnings, apply the “2.5x rule.” This provides a clearer lens for understanding the industry, revealing whether the box office tells the whole story or if strong aftermarket performance is creating a different kind of success.
A film’s true value isn’t just a number; it’s a legacy. The strong aftermarket results for films by directors like Robert Eggers are what enable such bold projects to exist. It’s not just a balance sheet—it’s the art of survival in a complex industry.

