“Toy Story 5” remained at the top of Friday’s box office despite new competition from “Supergirl” and “Jackass: The Best and Last.”
Disney and Pixar’s “Toy Story 5” grossed $21 million on 4,425 screens domestically in its second weekend in theaters. It is expected to raise between $70 million and $80 million by Sunday, with sales in North America expected to be just under $300 million. Last weekend, “Toy Story 5” set a 2026 domestic opening record with $160 million, and a series-high $312 million worldwide.
Weiner Brothers and DC’s “Supergirl” had the best showing among new films Friday, coming in at No. 2 domestically with $18 million from 3,602 theaters. About $50 million should be raised by the end of the week. For comparison, James Gunn’s Superman cost $225 million to make, debuted last summer with $125 million, and ended with $618 million. “Supergirl” cost a little less to make at $170 million, but still needs to be in theaters to justify its price tag.
“Supergirl” stars Millie Alcock as the titular 20-year-old Kryptonian who teams up with a shy alien girl in search of interplanetary justice. Other cast members include Eve Ridley, Jason Momoa, Matthias Schoenaerts, Diarmaid Murtagh, Ferdinand Kingsley, and David Corenswet. The film was directed by “I, Tonya” director Craig Gillespie and written by Ana Nogueira.
“Jackass: The Best and Last” earned $3.8 million in 2,855 theaters in North America, ranking fourth. The company expects to have made about $8.5 million in profits by Sunday. This is the lowest opening of the series, but the film only cost $10 million to make and will easily make back its budget, and then some. 2022’s Jackass Forever opened with $23 million and closed with $80 million.
“Jackass: The Best and Last,” like the previous four official films, follows Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, and their friends as they engage in wacky and usually extremely dangerous stunts and pranks. Directed by Jeff Tremaine.
Rounding out this week’s top five were Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day and Focus Features’ Obsession. “Obsession” came in fourth with $2.9 million, and the horror thriller is expected to gross $9.4 million by Sunday. Currie Barker’s “Obsession,” made for less than $1 million, will gross approximately $233 million in North America through its first seven weekends. “Disclosure Day” entered No. 5 on Friday with $2.3 million and is on track to reach an estimated $7.8 million by Sunday. After three weekends of release, “Disclosure Day” should reach a domestic total of $94 million.
