Part of me thinks we might be witnessing a historic box office weekend. After years of studios trying to figure out how to lure younger audiences back into theaters, there are now not one, but two movies attracting a significant number of under-25 moviegoers.
Perhaps part of the solution is that the barrier to entry for younger filmmakers has finally started to come down. The directors behind two of the season’s most profitable movies are both in their twenties and built their audiences through years of creating content on YouTube before making the leap to feature filmmaking.
Backrooms Smashes Expectations
Backrooms, which was already tracking to become A24’s biggest opening weekend ever, has blown past even the most optimistic projections (including ours). According to current estimates, the film is headed for an opening weekend between $85 million and $88 million. That’s more than The Mandalorian and Grogu earned during its opening weekend last week.
The success is even more remarkable when you consider that Backrooms reportedly cost only $10 million to produce. Directed by twenty-year-old Kane Parsons and based on his long-running web series, the film demonstrates a surprising level of maturity and confidence for such a young filmmaker.
What’s particularly interesting is that the casting doesn’t follow the usual template for a youth-oriented blockbuster. Renate Reinsve and Chiwetel Ejiofor aren’t the obvious choices to headline a film aimed at younger viewers, yet their involvement may have helped legitimize the project and broaden its appeal. Clearly, the strategy is working.
Why Hollywood Should Pay Attention
The success of Backrooms challenges several assumptions that have guided studio decision-making in recent years:
- Young audiences will only show up for established franchises.
- Original concepts are too risky to support at blockbuster levels.
- Social media and YouTube creators can’t successfully transition to mainstream filmmaking.
Backrooms appears to be disproving all three.
Obsession Continues Its Incredible Run
As impressive as Backrooms is, Curry Barker’s Obsession may be the even bigger story.
Already one of the year’s breakout hits, the film is actually expected to increase its box office haul again this weekend. Current projections suggest a remarkable 19% jump in its third weekend of release — a virtually unheard-of result for a wide release.
With an estimated $28 million weekend ahead, Obsession should easily cross the $100 million mark domestically. That’s an astonishing achievement for a movie that reportedly cost only $750k to make.
Trouble for The Mandalorian and Grogu
Perhaps the biggest shock to the Hollywood system is that Obsession is now poised to outgross The Mandalorian and Grogu this weekend.
The latest Star Wars film is looking at a steep 69% decline, with projections pointing toward a $25 million second weekend. While it’s still too early to definitively label the film a flop, the numbers are increasingly concerning.
Are Original Movies Making a Comeback?
The larger takeaway from this weekend may be that audiences are hungry for original stories.
Many of 2026’s biggest success stories — including Obsession, Backrooms, Michael, and Project Hail Mary — are not traditional franchise sequels. While established IP will always have a place in the marketplace, the recent success of original films suggests that audiences are more willing to embrace fresh ideas than many studio executives have assumed.
If the numbers hold, this weekend could be remembered as a turning point — one where Hollywood finally realized that younger audiences don’t just want another sequel. Sometimes, they want something new.
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