Box office Wrath of the Titans earned $83.6 million in North America and $221.6 million internationally for a worldwide total of $301 million, less than the $493 million grossed by its predecessor. The film was co-financed by
Warner Bros. and
Legendary Pictures for $150 million, about $25 million more than it cost to produce the original. It opened Friday, March 30, 2012, with $1 million from midnight screenings in 1,490 theaters. The film went on to earn $34.2 million in North America over the weekend, finishing in second place behind
The Hunger Games which was playing its second weekend. The opening was over half of the original's $61.2 million debut. It played well in IMAX representing $4.7 million of the total weekend's gross. The follow-up attracted a large male contingent on its opening weekend with 66%. Roughly 65% of the moviegoers – about 55% of whom were over the age of 25 – saw the film in 3D. However, despite not opening on a holiday weekend, the film had the advantage of playing a week before
Easter in which the company could avail the spring break, which was staggered over the next two weeks. However, all this didn't necessarily aid the film's further box office performance. Warner Bros. said they didn't expect the sequel to reach the same level. Also internationally, it had an
IMAX opening of $4 million from 176 screens – or $22,000 per site – with Russia contributing about $55,000 per-screen at 19 IMAX locations.
Metacritic assigned the film an
average score of 37 out of 100 based on 32 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". In
CinemaScore polls conducted during the opening weekend, audiences gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale, slightly better than the first film's "B" grade.
Todd McCarthy of
The Hollywood Reporter called it, "A relentlessly mechanical piece of work that will not or cannot take the imaginative leaps to yield even fleeting moments of awe, wonder or charm".
Roger Ebert, who gave the first film three stars, awarded
Wrath with only two, remarking "It lacks a comprehensible story, and you won't need your
CliffsNotes on the Greek myths. You get an idea of who the major players are, and then they spend a modest amount of time shouting laughable dialogue at one another while being all but forced off the screen by special effects.". Mark Olsen of the
Los Angeles Times criticized, "Directed this time out by Jonathan Liebesman, the film lacks inspiration or zest in storytelling, performance or action. This is pure product, a movie desperately without energy or enthusiasm of any kind". However, there have been some positive reviews. Andrew Barker of
Variety noted that, "The Clash of the Titans (franchise)|[
Clash of the Titans] franchise has matured ever so slightly with
Wrath of the Titans, hewing incrementally more faithfully to its Greek origins and trimming the fat in essential places".
Richard Corliss of
Time magazine wrote, "
Wrath [of the Titans] radiates the straight-forward, straight-faced pleasures of the mytho-muscular epics, like
Hercules and
Jason and the Argonauts, produced in Europe a half-century ago".
Owen Gleiberman of
Entertainment Weekly commented, "For a movie that's basically all warmed-over pseudo-mythology and special effects,
Wrath of the Titans is certainly more fun, in its solemnly junky way, than
John Carter. It may also be a little more fun than its cheeseball predecessor, the 2010 remake of
Clash of the Titans". ==Cancelled sequel==