
Steven Spielberg returned to the top of the box office as Disclosure Day took the #1 spot over the weekend.
Disclosure Day opened with $44.5 million domestically. That’s the fifth-best opening ever for Spielberg, unadjusted for inflation, and his best original (non-IP, non-sequel) opening ever. Worldwide, the movie has made $93.9 million. The movie got a B Cinemascore, which is a bit of a mixed reaction, so we’ll have to see how well it holds in this coming weekend and if it can counterprogram against the animated onslaught of Toy Story 5.
Obsession continues its unbelievable run at the box office, jumping back up to second place after being in fourth last weekend and making another $19 million, taking it to $188.3 for a domestic gross. This weekend’s take is higher than its opening weekend, and it’s been out for over a month. It has made over $287 million worldwide and is the eighth-highest-grossing film of the year, and it seems highly likely that it will outgross The Mandalorian and Grogu worldwide.
Scary Movie had a steep drop from last weekend’s #1 opening, falling 74% and dropping to third place with $14.2 million. It has $84.2 million domestically so far and $172.8 million worldwide.
Backrooms and Masters of the Universe rounded out the top 5.  Backrooms now has $262.5 million in worldwide revenue. Masters of the Universe dropped 70% from its unimpressive debut last weekend, making another $8.9 million domestically and bringing its domestic total to $86.3 million. It seems likely that Amazon will lose between $150-200 million, but they seem convinced that merchandise and Prime Video will soften its theatrical losses.
Just making the top ten were The Furious and Stop! That! Train! , which took ninth and tenth place respectively.  The Furious took in $2.8 million while Stop! That! Train! made just over $2 million.  The Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act had a gigantic drop in its second weekend, falling 87% and dropping out of the top 10 with $1.6 million. It seems it pulled in all the fans who wanted to experience it last weekend, and there was almost no one else curious to check it out for weekend two. That drop is the same as the drop for Billie Eilish: Hit Me Hard and Soft, which was also heavily front-loaded with fans in its opening weekend, with no interest from anyone who wasn’t already a fan.
