I remember sitting in the theater during the opening weekend of Avengers: Endgame, feeling the absolute electric energy in the room when all the portals opened. For a long time, I genuinely believed Marvel Studios was invincible. They owned the box office, they owned pop culture, and they dictated the release calendar. Whenever a new Avengers movie was announced, other studios would scramble to move their films out of the way. It was an unspoken rule in Hollywood: you don’t play chicken with an Avengers movie.
But as I was looking over the upcoming theatrical slate for this December, I noticed something wild. A game of box office chicken was actually happening, and for the first time in over a decade, it looks like Marvel is the one considering a tactical retreat.
The battleground? The middle of December. The opponents? Avengers: Doomsday and Denis Villeneuve’s highly anticipated Dune 3.
When I first heard the rumors that Marvel might actually change their release date to avoid clashing with the sands of Arrakis, I was shocked. But the deeper I dug into the behind-the-scenes logistics, the more it made perfect, undeniable sense. Let me break down exactly why the biggest superhero franchise in history is actively trying to dodge a giant sandworm.
The Ultimate Box Office Standoff

Let’s set the stage. For months, both Avengers: Doomsday and Dune 3 have been staring each other down with the exact same scheduled release date: December 18.
Initially, the entire cinema industry assumed this was a temporary error or a bluff. Everyone, including myself, thought Warner Bros. would eventually blink and move Dune 3 to the spring or summer. After all, Avengers: Doomsday isn’t just another sequel; it is Marvel’s biggest swing in years.
This is the movie that brings back the Russo Brothers (the mastermind directors behind Infinity War and Endgame). Even more insanely, it is the movie that brings back Robert Downey Jr., not as Iron Man, but as the iconic villain Doctor Doom. You would think a movie with that much hype would scare anyone away.
But Warner Bros. stood their ground. They claimed the mid-December slot first, and they absolutely refused to back down. And according to the latest industry whispers, specifically from insider John Campea, it is Marvel who is currently evaluating a date change.
Why? Because Warner Bros. played a brilliant trump card that Marvel simply cannot beat.
The IMAX Dilemma: Follow the Money
If you want to understand why blockbusters move, you have to look past the ticket sales and look directly at the premium screens. I am talking about IMAX, Dolby Cinema, and other Premium Large Formats (PLF).
When I go to see a massive spectacle like Dune or an Avengers crossover, I don’t want to watch it on a standard, dim screen. I want the ground-shaking audio. I want the massive IMAX aspect ratio. And I am willing to pay a premium price for that ticket. The studios know this. Today, PLF screens make up a massive percentage of a blockbuster’s total revenue.
Here is the fatal flaw in Marvel’s current December 18 plan:
Warner Bros. got there first. They already locked down airtight agreements with IMAX theaters globally for Dune 3.Denis Villeneuve practically built the Dune franchise to be the ultimate IMAX experience. The theaters know that Dune prints money on their massive screens.As it stands right now, almost every single IMAX screen for the week of December 18 is contractually dedicated to Dune 3.
If Marvel stubborns its way into releasing Avengers: Doomsday on the exact same day, they will be forced to play almost exclusively on standard screens. They would lose out on tens of millions of dollars in premium ticket surcharges in the opening weekend alone. For a movie that likely costs north of $300 million to produce, surrendering the IMAX revenue is essentially financial suicide.
Stepping Back to December 11
So, what is the escape plan? From the murmurs I am hearing, the solution is a slight, strategic sidestep.
Marvel is reportedly looking at bumping the film up by one or two weeks. The most logical landing spot is December 11.
This slot recently opened up because Jumanji 3 suffered a delay, leaving a massive, lucrative hole in the pre-holiday box office calendar. By taking this date, Marvel solves several massive headaches at once:
The IMAX Window: They get at least one full week of total IMAX exclusivity before Dune 3 takes over the screens.Word of Mouth: An earlier release allows them to build massive hype and momentum going into the lucrative Christmas holiday weeks.Avoiding Cannibalization: While the internet loves the idea of a “Barbenheimer” double feature, let’s be real. Asking general audiences to sit through a 3-hour sci-fi epic and a 3-hour superhero multiverse epic on the same weekend is exhausting and expensive.
The Stakes for Avengers: Doomsday

I completely understand why Marvel is being so protective of this film’s launch. Doomsday is carrying the weight of the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe on its shoulders. They simply cannot afford a messy opening weekend.
Just look at the sheer scale of what they are trying to pull off in this movie. Based on what we know, the cast is an absolute logistical nightmare (in the best way possible). The film will feature:
The New Avengers: Led by Sam Wilson’s Captain America.The Thunderbolts: The MCU’s new anti-hero black ops team.The Fantastic Four: Finally crossing over into the main timeline.The Wakandans: Bringing the advanced tech of Black Panther to the fight.The Legacy X-Men: We are talking about the return of legends like Patrick Stewart (Professor X), James Marsden (Cyclops), and Rebecca Romijn (Mystique) reprising their classic roles.
And all of these factions are uniting to stop RDJ’s Doctor Doom. It is a cinematic buffet of nostalgia and new beginnings. The Russo Brothers proved they could balance a cast of this size in Endgame, but the pressure here is arguably even higher because they have to win back a lot of fans who checked out during the multiverse saga.
My Final Thoughts
Honestly, I think Marvel moving the date is the smartest thing they could possibly do. There is no shame in avoiding a head-on collision that hurts everyone.
As a massive fan of both franchises, the last thing I want is to feel rushed. I want to fully digest the emotional devastation and visual poetry of Dune 3, and then I want to separately enjoy the chaotic, crowd-cheering, comic-book spectacle of Avengers: Doomsday. Shoving them into the same 48-hour window would ruin the cultural footprint of both.
If Marvel officially claims that early December spot, it sets up an incredible month for us moviegoers. We get our superhero fix early, and then we ride sandworms into the holidays.
But I am super curious about your viewing habits when it comes to these massive theatrical showdowns. If Marvel had kept the same release date and you could only buy one IMAX ticket for opening night, would you choose the epic sci-fi sands of Dune 3, or the multiverse madness of Avengers: Doomsday? Let me know your pick down in the comments!








