The highest-grossing movies of all time are a mixed bag of action movies, superhero movies, animated movies, and more. But the majority have one thing in common: they're just one piece in a larger franchise.
Whether it's the Marvel Cinematic Universe, James Bond, Pirates of the Caribbean, Star Wars, Middle-Earth, Harry Potter, Transformers, or any other major pop-culture series, these are beloved across the world.
That makes the top two movies on the list, two original movies not part of a franchise (yet), all the more surprising. But the lesson there is to trust James Cameron.
The highest-grossing movies ever are also a mix of well-reviewed and critically panned ones, from "Black Panther" to "Transformers: Age of Extinction." The list proves that, sometimes, audiences will see a movie no matter what the critics say, but great movies can also still rake in plenty of cash.
We've provided the top 100 biggest movies of all time, based on worldwide box-office numbers from Box Office Mojo. We've also provided how much they made in the US before and after inflation, and the movies' Rotten Tomatoes' critic scores.
Below are the 100 highest-grossing movies in the world of all time:
100. "Gravity" (2013)
Worldwide gross: $723,192,705
Adjusted domestic gross: $301,051,800
Original domestic gross: $274,092,705
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 96%
What critics said:"Gravity is not a film of ideas, like Kubrick's techno-mystical 2001, but it's an overwhelming physical experience -- a challenge to the senses that engages every kind of dread."— David Denby, New Yorker
99. "Deadpool 2" (2018)
Worldwide gross: $734,245,921
Adjusted domestic gross: $311,045,900
Original domestic gross: $318,491,426
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 83%
What critics said: "Deadpool 2 is an R-rated, potty-mouthed splatterfest and a funny one."— Bob Mondello, NPR
98. "Up" (2009)
Worldwide gross: $735,099,082
Adjusted domestic gross: $358,962,300
Original domestic gross: $293,004,164
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 98%
What critics said: "An exquisite work of cinematic art that also happens to be the funniest, most touching, most exciting and most entertaining movie released so far this year."— Lou Lumenick, New York Post
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