
Toy Story 5Â absolutely dominated the box office over the weekend, delivering the biggest opening of the year and the biggest opening for the franchise.
Toy Story 5 had a domestic opening of $160 million and a worldwide gross of $310.5 million. The domestic opening is $40 million higher than Toy Story 4’s $120.9 million opening in 2019. Even adjusted for inflation, Toy Story 5 is only $10 million behind Toy Story 3, which would have around a $170 million opening in 2026 dollars.  Toy Story 5 is the ninth-highest-grossing film worldwide in 2026 after one weekend. The movie got an A on CinemaScore, so word of mouth is going to be strong, although it’s only got one more weekend before the direct competition from Minions & Monsters.
Disclosure Day dropped to second place with $17.7 million, down 60% from last week’s opening. It has $78.9 million domestically and $161.1 million worldwide total so far.
Obsession is still in the top 3, taking third place with another $13.3 million and dropping 30% from last week. It has $215 million domestically and $333.2 million worldwide, and is the seventh-biggest movie worldwide for 2026, now outgrossing The Mandalorian & Grogu.
Backrooms and Scary Movie rounded out the top 5.  Backrooms has $272.7 million worldwide and is the 10th-biggest film of 2026,, while Scary Movie has $201.9 million worldwide.
Two of the weekend’s new releases barely made it into the top, with The Death of Robin Hood taking eighth place with $2.8 million and Leviticus taking ninth place with $2.6 million.  The Death of Robin Hood got a C+ CinemaScore, which most likely indicates mixed to negative word of mouth, so expect it to drop out of the top 10 this coming weekend. For A24 releases, The Death of Robin Hood is toward the bottom of their list, ranking behind movies like Pearl, which opened with $3.1 million.
