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Summer Blockbusters Aren’t Just for the Summer Anymore

Hollywood is starting to release big summer blockbuster films all year long.

Clark Kent and the caped crusader handily dodged critics’ barbs this spring to beat all-time records for a box-office opening weekend in the month of March, raking in $166 million in ticket sales.

The movie, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, was so jam-packed with crowd-pleasers (Bruce Wayne! Lois Lane! A $250 million budget!) that it was all but guaranteed to be a hit. But there was one significant way it bucked studios’ tried-and-true moneymaking conventions: It came out long before the traditional explosion-fest of the summer movie season.

It’s part of a trend in which more studios select early May, April, and even March weekends for the high-­octane action flicks that typically open after school’s out. The reason: There aren’t enough summer weekends left. As studios double down on big-budget debuts, they’re creeping earlier on the calendar to make space—Batman v Superman, for example, was pushed earlier to avoid Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War, out May 6.

The spring blockbuster dates back to at least 2002, when Sony’s (SNE) first Spider-Man movie posted a nine-figure opening weekend a few days into May. But in 2014 the summer months were the softest they had been since 1997, partly because good movies debuted in other seasons. Batman v Superman was the first big superhero movie Warner Bros. released before May in decades, though Disney’s (DIS) Marvel has made a habit of it. And none of the smash-hit Hunger Games films have come out in the summer.

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So is the summer blockbuster dead? Well, no. Last summer was by far the ­highest-grossing season of 2015. But with each year bringing more successful early-spring tent-pole films, big-budget smash-’em-ups are a little closer to a year-round affair.

A version of this article appears in the May 1, 2016 issue of Fortune with the headline “In Theaters This Spring: Summer Blockbusters.”