The summer box office is booming â but not because of the usual suspects.
After three weeks of indie horror dominance at the box office, the slasher spoof âScary Movieâ topped ticket sales with $55 million over the weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday, easily besting the far-from-mighty âMasters of the Universe.â
A new order has lately come to movie theaters, which have seen Gen Z ticket buyers flock to the horror hits âObsessionâ and âBackrooms,â both made by YouTubers-turned-filmmakers. Those movies have even outshone The Walt Disney Co.âs âStar Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu.â
This weekend, comedy was the underdog champ. Though the genre has been all but left for dead in theaters, the sixth âScary Movieâ notched a franchise-best $105.5 million global launch. The Wayans brother comedy even outdid its primary satirical target, the âScreamâ franchise. Earlier this year, âScream 7â debuted with $97 million worldwide.
Both franchises are distributed by Paramount Pictures, though Miramax produced the new âScary Movie.â Co-written by Marlon, Shawn, Keenan and Craig Wayans, the sequel marks the Wayansâ return to the franchise after their departure over creative differences following 2001âs âScary Movie 2.â
âThis is an outstanding opening for a comedy sequel this far into the series,â said David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm FranchiseRe. "Itâs a huge bounceback after the last episode crashed in 2013 when Anna Faris and Regina Hall were excluded. The weekend figure is triple the average for the genre.â
Reviews werenât good (26% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) and audience scores (a âBâ CinemaScore) were so-so. But that didnât stop the $30-million âScary Movieâ from dominating its much bigger budget competition.
âMasters of the Universe,â a sword and sorcery action adventure based on the 1980s animated series and Mattel toys, failed to revive the dormant franchise. The Amazon MGM release, the second âMasters of the Universeâ film following a 1987 movie of the same title, opened with $29.3 million domestically.
âMasters of the Universe,â starring Nicholas Galitzine as He-Man, added $25 million overseas. But for a film that cost nearly $200 million to produce, a much higher launch was needed to make profitability likely.
Itâs Mattel Studiosâ first release since 2023âs âBarbie.â But after the extraordinary $1.45 billion success of that film, âMasters of the Universeâ will be closer to a flop for the toy company.
A24âs âBackrooms,â last weekendâs top release, slid steeply on its second weekend, dropping 68% with $25.9 million. But âBackrooms,â a $10 million movie based on 20-year-old Kane Parsonâs YouTube series remains a record-breaking phenomenon. It's now A24âs highest grossing film ever with $212 million worldwide, moving ahead of âMarty Supreme."
In a near tie for third place, Focus Featuresâ âObsessionâ grossed $25.6 million in its fourth weekend. That marked a paltry 7% drop from the previous weekend for 26-year-old Curry Barkerâs horror sensation. Not accounting for inflation, no horror movie has ever had a better fourth weekend.
âObsession,â about a man who wishes his crush returned his affections, was made for less than $1 million. Itâs now grossed $152.1 million domestically and $224.8 million worldwide â a record for Focus.
In its third weekend, âThe Mandalorian and Groguâ fell all the way to sixth place with $10 million. It was even bested by Fathom Entertainmentâs âThe Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act,â a combination of the last two episodes of the animated series. It collected $12.7 million.
A few other movies hit milestones.
Lionsgateâs Michael Jackson biopic âMichaelâ became the studioâs highest grossing film ever with $898 million globally. That puts it ahead, not accounting for inflation, both the highest grossing entries in the studioâs âTwilightâ and âHunger Gamesâ franchises.
And 2026 got its first billion-dollar movie. âThe Super Mario Galaxy Movieâ crossed $1 billion worldwide for Universal.
The weekend overall was up a remarkable 63% from the same weekend last year, according to Comscore. Ticket sales on the year are up more than 13%. Next weekend, Steven Spielbergâs âDisclosure Dayâ debuts.
With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:
âScary Movie,â $55 million.
âMasters of the Universe,â $29.3 million.
âBackrooms,â $25.9 million.
âObsession,â $25.6 million.
âThe Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act,â $12.7 million.
âStar Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu,â $10 million.
âMichael,â $7.7 million.
âThe Breadwinner,â $3.4 million.
âPressure,â $3 million.
âThe Devil Wears Prada 2,â $2.8 million.
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