Minions & Monsters
Universal owns the holiday: Minions & Monsters is the July 4th event, and Illumination has done this exact play before. The clean comp is Minions: The Rise of Gru, which opened to $107M over the 2022 holiday frame and legged to $370.5M; Despicable Me 2 took the same midweek-into-July-4 slot in 2013 and did $83.5M across its three-day on the way to $368.1M. This time around, Minions & Monsters opens Wednesday and while we don’t have full numbers yet, it’s shaping up for around $14M on opening day. That’s quite a bit lower than the previous entries — about half of Despicable Me 4’s opening day. While the Minions films always open during this July 4th corridor, the calendar each year is slightly different, so it’s better to compare the overall 5-day openings. Even still, this shows that franchise fatigue is kicking in here. With this opening day, we could be headed to around $80M for the 5-day opening. That could equate to maybe $40–45M over the Fri–Sun portion.
Surprisingly, Minions & Monsters is getting the best reviews of the franchise, currently at around 90% — but initial audience reactions are softer than expected. A movie like this actually wants those audience reactions much more than it needs good reviews, so that could impact word-of-mouth if that trend continues over the full weekend. If it does come in at $80M like we’re seeing it now, that probably puts a $300M domestic total out of reach, with $200M–$250M the likely end range. While that’s strong, it is a concerning drop from the consistent $330–$370M range this franchise usually falls in, especially if it ends up on the lower end of our range. In the long-range July preview we said July’s three biggies (Minions & Monsters, Moana, The Odyssey) had a fairly set-in-stone $200M–$400M domestic range, but that we’d need to see them approach $300M+ for July to really hit big. We’ll wait to see what happens with Minions and report back later, but right now it’s looking to come in at the low end of that range, which means more heavy lifting is needed from Moana and The Odyssey in the weeks to come.
Toy Story 5
Toy Story 5 hands over the crown — but it will be a lot closer than we initially expected. It should be at around $335M heading into the weekend after a slightly steeper (but still solid) drop than expected last weekend at -56%. We’d hope to see it stabilize this weekend, but it also has direct competition opening, so another 50% drop may be in the cards, or maybe something a little better at between -45 and -50%. At 50% and $35M, it would be at around $370M after 17 days. While it will still easily become the biggest Toy Story ever, it’s definitely falling behind Incredibles 2 and Inside Out 2, with $600M (and probably $550M too) out of reach. $500M still feels good though, which comfortably places it ahead of The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’s $430M as the biggest hit of the year. That’s a title it will keep for the rest of July… until a certain spider comes along.
Supergirl
Supergirl already opened soft at $37.1M, and the sophomore frame is where weak word of mouth gets punished, especially for superhero movies which are famously front-loaded. A 58% Tomatometer and a B- CinemaScore rarely support a shallow second-weekend hold, and against a wall of family competition, a 60%+ drop would be expected here. If it can avoid -65% or more, that would actually be OK all things considered. Supergirl has no chance at $100M and looks to end up potentially at $80M, just ahead of Joker: Folie à Deux and Morbius… not exactly esteemed company. Unfortunately it’s doing even worse overseas, so don’t expect this one to get over $150M worldwide, joining Masters of the Universe as another bomb this summer.
Young Washington
Young Washington looks like a hit for Angel Studios — presales and tracking have really picked up over the last two weeks, to the point where it could even take the #3 spot away from Supergirl. Right now we’re seeing it at $12–15M, but it’s looking increasingly likely to hit the top end of that range. That would be a great start, even if it ends up front-loaded given the nature of the film and the July 4th weekend.
Obsession
Finally starting to slow down a little, Obsession saw drops this week in the 30–40% range for the first time in its run. If it drops 30% this weekend, we’re looking at about $6M. It’s only a week from crossing $250M domestically, and we’re now seeing it probably finishing around $265M–$270M, just barely shy of Sinners’ $280M total. Worldwide should still land around $400M before the run finally ends.
Disclosure Day
Disclosure Day is at $96.9M through 19 days after a -53% third weekend, and this is the frame it finally crosses $100M. A fourth weekend around $4–5M keeps it pointed at the ~$110M finish our model projects on sub-3x legs. That’s a perfectly fine outcome for a $44M opener with a B CinemaScore — not a breakout, but a long way from a bomb.
Down the chart, Jackass 5 follows its franchise-low $8.4M bow with a likely ~$4M sophomore frame, while Scary Movie 6 ($104.5M) and Masters of the Universe ($62.7M) wind down. The Mandalorian & Grogu pushes past $175.9M in its eighth weekend, and Michael holds at $370.6M as 2026’s #3 domestic earner behind The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, with Toy Story at #2 and headed to the top spot.
Illumination won the July 4th weekend, but not the way it wanted: Minions & Monsters opened way below the franchise average, Toy Story 5 pushed past $366M, Young Washington broke out at $20.8M, and Supergirl cratered -74%.
Minions & Monsters
Minions & Monsters won the July 4th weekend with $36.4M, but if you read our preview, you know this isn’t the number Illumination wanted. We flagged the ~$14M opening day as a warning sign, and the three-day confirmed it — this is comfortably below the franchise’s usual highs (Minions at $115M 3-day, Minions 2 at $107M 3-day, Despicable Me 4 at $122M 5-day). The $61.4M five-day is fine, but “fine” isn’t what a Minions movie is supposed to be. Reviews are actually the best the franchise has seen (~90%), but it looks like a softer audience reaction and some franchise fatigue are finally kicking in.
To be fair to the film (and the rest of the top 10), July 4th falling on a Saturday is basically worst-case scenario for the weekend box office, and we saw that reflected in the charts: basically everything was down and overall Saturday was down -35% from Friday, which is the exact opposite of what happens on a regular weekend. That could mean some of the business for Minions spreads out into this week. But with a $61M 5-day opening, it’s going to need that to even get to $200M. You’d have to look at at least 3.27x legs to get there — which sounds very doable until you remember we’re using the 5-day opening for those legs, which is much harder than grabbing 3.27x off the 3-day. Let’s hope it can get there: the range could be $175M–$225M at this point unless it holds much stronger than expected next weekend. Worldwide is $160M, and it should be said — these movies only cost $85M, so this will easily be a profitable hit for Universal — it’s just a real step down from the highs we’ve seen before.
As far as what this means for July, it’s not a promising start to a month that is really relying on three big blockbusters (Minions, Moana and The Odyssey) performing at or above expectations. Minions will end up at least $100M lower than where we saw it, and Moana presales haven’t set the world on fire yet for next weekend.
Toy Story 5
Toy Story 5 had another steepish drop, easing 56% to $31M and crossing $366M to become the year’s #3 earner now and closing on Michael for #2, before eventually surpassing Mario Galaxy’s $430M in 2 weeks or so to take the top spot. That’s an identical drop to last weekend, and much steeper than the sub-50% drops that Inside Out 2, Incredibles 2, and Toy Story 3 and 4 all had in the third weekend. As a raw figure, $31M actually is lower than Toy Story 4’s 3rd weekend of $35M despite opening $40M above it, highlighting the less impressive legs this time around (at least so far). Of course, Saturday holiday played a factor in the decline, but we really need to see a strong hold next week against Moana to keep $500M locked in. This will still be the biggest Toy Story domestically and is a big win for the studio even if it falls short of $500M. Minions dropping from its franchise average just proves how impressive that feat is. The franchise is stronger than ever five movies in. Worldwide is now at $760M+ and still aiming for the $1B mark.
Young Washington
Young Washington blew past our $13–17M call to open at a great $20.8M for Angel Studios. We mentioned that this might break out higher than that range as presales started to really pick up last week, and that proved to be the case here. That’s another genuine win for Angel Studios and some smart programming to coincide with this holiday weekend. It actually went up 1% on Saturday — the only film to do so — confirming the smart programming did indeed strike a chord. It’ll be front-loaded given the holiday theme, but a $20M+ start puts $40M+ domestic comfortably in reach, which for Angel’s economics is a home run.
Supergirl
Supergirl, meanwhile, fell apart. We expected a rough sophomore frame, but -74% is worse than the -60% we were hoping for, dropping it to $9.6M and $58.5M total. After two weekends, there’s no spinning this one: this is bomb behavior, and it’s now tracking to end with less than $80M domestically. That really puts the whole DCU refresh into question — maybe it’s time we start making standalone movies that aren’t part of some greater expanded universe, unless said superhero movie is Avengers.
Down the chart, Disclosure Day quietly did its job, easing 27% to $6M and crossing $100M on its way to a ~$110M finish, while Obsession’s $5.3M pushes it to $245M with $250M up next week. The Invite was the weekend’s best hold, up 111% on an expansion to 28 theaters, and Backrooms held at -25% for $3.3M and $190.5M, still A24’s biggest release ever.
