This weekend’s box office largely played out as expected, though not every prediction landed perfectly. Toy Story 5 continued its dominance exactly as anticipated, while Supergirl came in almost dead on its forecast despite the muted audience response leading into release. The bigger miss belonged to Jackass: Best and Last, whose limited marketing campaign ultimately proved even more damaging than expected. Apparently, nostalgia only gets you so far when people forget your movie is opening.
Elsewhere, several holdovers continued their theatrical runs, although the chart is beginning to settle into the familiar pattern that follows every major blockbuster release. Unless something unexpected arrives, the next few weeks should be more about staying power than surprise openings.
Toy Story 5 Continues to Lead

Toy Story 5 remained comfortably atop the box office with $70.0 million in its second weekend.
After opening to $160 million, Pixar’s latest sequel delivered the kind of hold Disney was hoping for. Family films have consistently demonstrated stronger legs than most genres throughout 2026, and there was little reason to believe Toy Story 5 would be any different.
With no meaningful family competition arriving for several weeks, the film has effectively been handed the keys to the multiplex. Sometimes scheduling does as much of the heavy lifting as marketing.
Supergirl Opens Slightly Below Expectations

Supergirl debuted with $38.0 million.
Last week, the film was tracking between $39 million and $51 million, with an estimate of roughly $40 million because early reactions had been somewhat lukewarm. That assessment proved fairly accurate, with the film landing almost exactly where expected.
For a DC superhero film, however, the result feels more respectable than exciting. Comic book movies were once expected to flirt with $100 million openings almost by default. Those days appear increasingly distant, especially when audiences aren’t convinced they’re witnessing an event.
Obsession Continues to Defy Gravity
Obsession earned $9.8 million.
The thriller continues to age remarkably well. While virtually every major release has seen attention shift elsewhere, Obsession keeps finding an audience. Word of mouth has become one of the most overused phrases in box office analysis, but in this case it genuinely appears to explain the film’s longevity.
Jackass: Best and Last Stumbles Out of the Gate
Jackass: Best and Last opened with $8.4 million.

This was one prediction that proved overly optimistic. The film had been expected to land around $16 million despite a modest marketing campaign, but even that may have underestimated just how little awareness surrounded the release.
Whether audiences have simply moved on from the franchise or whether the studio failed to communicate that the film even existed is difficult to say. Either way, the result represents a disappointing start for what was billed as the crew’s farewell.
Disclosure Day Rounds Out the Top Five
Disclosure Day added $8.1 million.
Steven Spielberg’s latest continues to quietly collect revenue, though its theatrical run is clearly entering its final stretch. Its opening benefited from solid word of mouth despite a restrained marketing campaign, but even Spielberg isn’t immune to the natural lifecycle of a theatrical release.
Next Weekend’s Predictions
Next weekend looks unusually quiet, with no major wide releases tracking strongly enough to challenge the current top five. As a result, expect the chart to remain largely unchanged, with Toy Story 5 comfortably holding onto first place while the rest of the field shifts only slightly.
As always, we’ll find out next week.
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