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Speaking with Entertainment Weekly, Johnson shared an update on Jungle Cruise 2, revealing any plans for a follow-up have been scrapped. “I think when Disney came under new leadership, they just shifted coming out of COVID,” he said. “COVID shifted our business in a lot of ways. I think they looked at that property and thought,ย ‘we did it once, not sure if we should revisit it again.’ Despite whether or not our chemistry was great.”
Why Disney Cancelled Jungle Cruise 2

Jungle Cruise hit theaters in the summer of 2021, just as Hollywood was only beginning to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. It was also simultaneously released on Disney+ as part of the streamer’s Premier Access program (allowing viewers to watch it at home for a fee). Jungle Cruise grossed $220.8 million worldwide, a figure that doesn’t sound too bad considering the situation. However, the number pales in comparison to the totals posted by other genre films, such as Dune ($402.1 million), Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings ($432.2 million), and Godzilla vs. Kong ($470.1 million). While the box office was still hampered by the lingering effects of the pandemic, it was possible for blockbusters to post robust numbers.
Disney might have looked at Jungle Cruise‘s performance and determined it wasn’t worth producing another installment (Jungle Cruise had a production budget of $200 million). Jungle Cruise was another attempt by the studio to replicate the Pirates of the Caribbean formula, turning a popular theme park attraction into a blockbuster franchise. Outside of Pirates, these endeavors have not been very successful. Tomorrowland was a box office bomb, as was Haunted Mansion. Disney seemingly remains interested in making more theme park adaptations (Scarlett Johansson’s Tower of Terror), but there’s enough evidence out there to suggest this trend should be put to rest โ save for the impending Pirates of the Caribbean reboot.








