With the release of its 17th film, "Finding Dory," on June 17, Pixar will likely continue the box-office domination that began with the release of its first film, "Toy Story," in 1995.
Though each Pixar film released has made the studio a substantial net profit, not every movie has lived up to the immense success of some of the company's true blockbuster hits.
Using Box Office Mojo's and The Numbers' sales and production statistics for each film, Business Insider has ranked all 16 Pixar movies so far by their inflation-adjusted net profit, to keep things on an even playing field (so, subtracting budget from box-office gross) to determine which film was the most financially successful of its time. (The formula doesn't take into account marketing and other costs, however, so net profits are actually likely smaller.)
Accordingly, we adjusted all global box-office receipts and budgets for inflation through 2016 using the US inflation calculator.
Read on to see which Pixar film came out on top, and which landed at the bottom of the heap:
SEE ALSO: Every Pixar movie, ranked — here's how 'Finding Dory' stacks up
16. "The Good Dinosaur" (2015) - Adjusted net profit: $158.3 million
Adjusted gross: 335 million
Unadjusted gross: 331.9 million
Adjusted budget: 176.7 million
Unadjusted budget: 175 million*
*Note: Pixar never officially disclosed budget information for "The Good Dinosaur," but the LA Times reported that the budget was estimated between $175 million and $200 million. Given the lowest possible budget, this film was still the least financially successful.
15. "A Bug's Life" (1998) - Adjusted net profit: $357.3 million
Adjusted gross: 533.4 million
Unadjusted gross: 363.4 million
Adjusted budget: 176.1 million
Unadjusted budget: 120 million
14. "Brave" (2012) - Adjusted net profit: $368.9 million
Adjusted gross: 533.4 million
Unadjusted gross: 363.4 million
Adjusted budget: 176.1 million
Unadjusted budget: 120 million
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