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Avengers: Endgame took just 11 days to make more than $2 billion at the global box office, passing Titanic to become the second highest-grossing film of all time (at $2.8 billion, Avatar remains in first—for now). The Marvel superhero movie shattered pretty much every opening weekend box-office record in existence.

But Endgame‘s accomplishments aren’t quite as remarkable if you adjust its totals for inflation. The bloated cost of a movie ticket in 2019 (about $9 on average, according to Box Office Mojo) has undeniably helped the film hit gargantuan figures.

Plenty of other films have technically performed better relative to the cost of a ticket at the time of release; 38 such films, in fact.

Rank Film Adjusted US box office gross 1 Gone with the Wind $1.8 billion 2 Star Wars $1.6 billion 3 The Sound of Music $1.3 billion 4 E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial $1.27 billion 5 Titanic $1.22 billion 6 The Ten Commandments $1.2 billion 7 Jaws $1.1 billion 8 Doctor Zhivago $1 billion 9 The Exorcist $996 million 10 Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs $982 million 11 Star Wars: The Force Awakens $974 million 12 101 Dalmatians $900 million 13 The Empire Strikes Back $884 million 14 Ben-Hur $883 million 15 Avatar $877 million 16 Return of the Jedi $847 million 17 Jurassic Park $825 million 18 Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace $813 million 19 The Lion King $803.2 million 20 The Sting $803.1 million 21 Raiders of the Lost Ark $798 million 22 The Graduate $771 million 23 Fantasia $748 million 24 Jurassic World $712 million 25 The Godfather $711 million 26 Forrest Gump $708 million 27 Mary Poppins $704 million 28 Grease $694 million 29 Marvel’s The Avengers $693 million 30 Black Panther $687 million 31 Thunderball $674 million 32 The Dark Knight $671 million 33 The Jungle Book $663 million 34 Sleeping Beauty $654 million 35 Avengers: Infinity War $652 million 36 Avengers: Endgame $645 million

Gone with the Wind (1939) was a singular feat unlikely to ever be duplicated—the biggest movie in the world, then and now. In the first few years after its release, the movie sold more than 60 million tickets, equivalent to roughly half the United States population at the time. Today it’s estimated to have sold over 200 million individual tickets, almost triple Endgame‘s current estimated ticket total (about 70 million). When the film came out, the average price of a movie ticket in the US was just 23 cents.

Things are very different now. Going to the movies is a lot less popular, as people contend with rising ticket and concessions costs and instead spend their time elsewhere—on Netflix, YouTube, Instagram, and Fortnite. Gone with the Wind faced little competition for attention (well, outside of World War II, that is).

The 1939 epic drama may have been more successful in relative terms, but Endgame‘s reach is far wider: No film has opened in more theaters or in more countries than the Marvel epic. So while more people may have seen Gone with the Wind in theaters than will ever see Endgame, the latter may have a broader cultural imprint, plus another lifetime of ubiquity on streaming services, home video, and on-demand.