
The Super Mario Galaxy Movie remained at the top of the box office for a third weekend in a row, with Project Hail Mary still an incredibly strong second place.
The Super Mario Galaxy Movie made another $36.4 million domestically, bringing its total to $356.7 million. Worldwide, it has over $750 million, and it seems like crossing the billion mark is not that far away. It is the highest-grossing film worldwide for 2026 by just over $100 million, with China’s Pegasus 3 in second with $641 million.
Project Hail Mary remained in second place with another $20.5 million, only dropping 15% from last weekend. It has grossed over $285 million domestically and $573.1 million worldwide, making it the third-highest-grossing film of the year.
Lee Cronin’s The Mummy debuted in third place with $13.5 million domestically. That’s a solid mid-debut for Blumhouse, but not a breakout hit. It’s down from director Lee Cronin’s last effort, Evil Dead Rise, which opened to just over $24 million in 2023. Compared to Blumhouse’s other recent reimaginings of classic Universal Monsters, it’s less than The Invisible Man’s opening, which made $28 million in 2020, but it was up from last year’s abysmal Wolf Man, which opened to $10.8 million.  The Mummy got a C+ Cinemascore, which is fairly typical for horror, but we’ll have to see how steep it drops off this coming weekend.
The Drama and You, Me & Tuscany rounded out the top 5.  The Drama is up to $39.6 million domestically and $81.7 million worldwide.
Further down the list, Normal didn’t have a strong debut, opening in seventh place with $2.5 million. That’s down even from the opening of Nobody, which had to deal with all the COVID restrictions still in place in 2021 and opened to $6.7 million. The movie also got a C+ from CinemaScore, which isn’t good for word-of-mouth, so it could quickly slip out of the top ten.
Faces of Death sank like a rock in its second weekend with a massive 82% drop from last weekend’s opening, making just under $300,000 in 1,000 theaters.
