This holiday season at the box office is nothing short of a rollercoaster ride, folks! Who would’ve thought we’d be talking about Mufasa outshining Sonic on Christmas Day? I mean, seriously, isn’t it wild how adult-skewing films are raking in impressive returns, while kids’ favorites are taking unexpected hits? It’s like watching a Christmas miracle unfold right before our eyes! Can you believe Robert Eggers’s ghostly creeper, Nosferatu, practically gave Sonic the ol’ one-two punch? It’s like an intriguing mix of holiday cheer and box office drama, leaving us all guessing what’s next. So, grab your popcorn and settle in as we break down the surprising twists and turns of this year’s Christmas box office showdown! LEARN MORE.
Adult-skewing titles are posting heftier than expected box office returns, while Mufasa mauled Sonic 3 on Christmas Day.
The Christmas box office is proving to be unpredictable this holiday season. While Sonic the Hedgehog 3 slaughtered Mufasa: The Lion King at the box office last weekend, in an altogether unexpected turn of events, the Disney prequel had a monster Christmas Day haul, with Deadline reporting that the film earned a solid $14.7 million. Even more unexpected was the fact that Sonic 3 was beaten by Robert Eggers’s distinctly adult-skewing Nosferatu, which made a rock-solid $11.5 million, compared to Sonic’s $10.5 million. A Complete Unknown, the (awesome) Bob Dylan biopic starring Timothee Chalamet, made $7.1 million to hit fourth place, while Wicked came in fifth with a still-strong $5.4 million. A24’s Babygirl made $1.5 million for seventh place.
So how will the holiday box office shape up? Mufasa has been given new life, so I expect that one to make over $70 million for the five-day holiday, while Sonic 3 should dip to around $50 million. The reversal in box office fortunes for those two movies is one of the biggest surprises of the year as far as I’m concerned, but kudos to Disney, who, in the end, made a wise choice opening the prequel in the Christmas box office corridor, even if it’s unlikely to make anything close to the $1.5 billion the first film did.
For the five-day holiday, Nosferatu should make about $40 million in third place, which would be an amazing result for Focus. It earned a B-minus CinemaScore rating (solid for a horror title). A Complete Unknown should build up momentum as the holiday goes on, with the A-CinemaScore rating pointing to a 5-day result in the $25 million area, while Wicked shouldn’t be too far behind with about $20 million.
Here are our predictions for the 5-day holiday:
What have you been watching this holiday weekend? Let us know in the comments!