Every now and then, Hollywood delivers a story that’s almost too ironic to believe. In 2025, Disney’s live-action Snow White bombed so badly that even a single painting from the original animated film ended up outshining it financially.

A Film Meant to Be a Crown Jewel
Disney’s remake, led by Rachel Zegler, was intended to breathe new life into the studio’s very first feature-length classic. Instead, it quickly unraveled. Long before the movie’s release, Zegler’s interviews dismissing the 1937 version as “sexist” rubbed fans the wrong way. Political debates swirled around both her and co-star Gal Gadot, ensuring the project was tangled in drama from day one.

When the film finally premiered on March 21, 2025, it stumbled with just $42 million in domestic earnings. Even its worldwide haul of $194 million couldn’t make up for the enormous $270 million spent on production and marketing. Disney was left staring at a staggering $115 million loss.
Meanwhile, at an Auction House…
While the movie floundered, collectors flocked to a Disney animation art auction. Original concept paintings from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) sold for eye-watering sums. One Gustaf Tenggren piece showing the Evil Queen disguised as the old hag fetched $168,000, while another iconic moment went for over $100,000. In total, the auction earned $5.2 million.
That means paintings nearly nine decades old outperformed the remake in terms of value. In fact, when you consider the live-action film’s losses, the artwork was actually the bigger “success story.”
The Sting for Disney
Disney quietly shelved future plans for Snow White after the embarrassment. Marketing efforts were cut back, international pushes scaled down, and the studio shifted focus to Lilo & Stitch (2025), which proved fans would happily support a remake done with care and respect.

Lessons From a Fairy Tale
The irony couldn’t be sharper: a classic piece of art brought in more value than a multimillion-dollar movie meant to modernize the same story. The takeaway is simple—audiences still treasure the originals, while Disney’s attempt at rewriting history fell flat. The live-action experiment not only lost money but also left the company with a bruised reputation for tampering with its most cherished stories.



