Play time is over. Or, actually, maybe it has just begun? Either way, โToy Story 5โ topped the box office charts on Friday.
Disney and Pixarโs โToy Story 5โ easily claimed Fridayโs box office crown with $71 million from 4,425 North American theaters. Most have the family film earning about $150 million through the weekend, but some forecasters have that figure climbing as high as $175 million. Even at the lowest end of those estimates, โToy Story 5โ will easily cement the best opening weekend in franchise history, a record that currently belongs to โToy Story 4โ with $120 milion. Itโs shaping up to be a major payout for team Mouse House, and they are going to need it since โTS5โ carries a $275 million production budget plus marketing costs.
โToy Story 5โ sees Buzz, Woody and Jessie do battle with an edutainment smart tablet named Lilypad, which threatens to take over their play time with Bonnie. Tom Hanks, Tim Allen and Joan Cusack all return to the voice cast, joined by newcomers Greta Lee, Keanu Reeves, Craig Robinson, Alan Cumming, Conan OโBrien and Bad Bunny.
This weekendโs other major newcomer, โThe Death of Robin Hood,โ didnโt fare quite as well. The A24 release finished in eighth after making an estimated $1.1 million domestically on opening day from 1,782 theaters. Through the weekend, it should make off with about $2.5 million. From writer-director Michael Sarnoski, โThe Death of Robin Hoodโ follows the mythical outlaw as he fights for salvation after a lifetime of crime. Hugh Jackman stars in the titular role alongside Jodie Comer, Bill Skarsgรฅrd, Jade Coot and Katie Breen.
Second place went to Steven Spielbergโs โDisclosure Day,โ which made $4.9 million domestically on Friday as it heads into its second weekend in theaters. By Sunday, the alien conspiracy thriller should add $17.2 million (a 61% drop from last weekend), pushing its North American total to $78.4 million. Universal spent $115 million to produce โDisclosure Dayโ and another $80 million on marketing.
Third place went to Focus Featuresโ โObsession,โ which is still putting butts in seats as it enters its sixth weekend in cinemas. It grossed $4.7 million on Friday, and should collect $14 million through the weekend. That would put the horror-thrillerโs domestic earnings at $215 million, an astonishing feat considering the film was made for about $1 million.
Rounding out the top five were A24โs โBackroomsโ and Paramountโs โScary Movie.โ โBackroomsโ took fourth with $2.4 million on Friday and is expected to make $7.4 million by Sunday, all according to rival estimates. Through four weekends of release, the filmโs domestic total should reach $175 million. โScary Movieโ landed in fifth, pulling in $2.1 million. After making an estiamated $6.6 million through the weekend, its domestic total should reach around $97 million through three weekends in North American cinemas.