Box Office: ‘Disclosure Day’ tops weekend charts as ‘Obsession’ takes second place

By , June 14, 2026

Steven Spielberg’s “Disclosure Day,” billed as his first popcorn movie in years, launched with Ksh 5.68 billion ($44 million) in domestic theatres, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Disclosure Day” opened largely as expected, collecting Ksh 11.95 billion worldwide over its first weekend. That was good enough to give the 79-year-old Spielberg, who conceived the film’s story, his best opening weekend for an original movie, not accounting for inflation.

Of course, Spielberg is the father of the modern blockbuster. But “Disclosure Day,” released by Universal Pictures, is his first summer movie in 10 years. And it opened in a much different movie world than once greeted “Jaws” or “Jurassic Park.” Its closest competition was the indie horror hit “Obsession,” directed by a YouTuber-turned-filmmaker, Curry Barker, more than 50 years Spielberg’s junior.

“It played very, very evenly across all of the U.S. and Canada,” said Jim Orr, distribution chief for Universal. “It did not come across as a coastal big-market movie. It resonated with everybody.”

While a much-watched NBA finals game might have been expected to depress ticket sales, at least in New York, Orr said there was no noticeable dip in the city’s box office numbers Saturday night.

After Gen Z propelled moviegoing for the last several weeks, a slightly older audience drove interest in “Disclosure Day.” Some 41% of moviegoers were aged 45 and up.

“What’s encouraging is that we had this big an opening with that audience demographic and with the fact that it’s an original film,” said Orr. “So if we’re opening this well, and we think we’re going to have great word-of-mouth, and we have an older audience that doesn’t necessarily rush out on opening weekend, all of that points to a great run through the summer.”

“Disclosure Day” returns Spielberg to the subject of alien life. Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor and Colman Domingo star in a chase to reveal government evidence of UFO encounters. It cost Ksh 14.89 billion ($115 million) to make.

While a good start, “Disclosure Day” — like most original movies — will depend on strong legs to be successful. Reviews (80% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) have been strong, though audience response wasn’t overwhelming. The movie landed a “B” CinemaScore.

“It’s off to a solid start,” said Paul Dergarabedian, head of marketplace trends for Rentrak. “Let’s see how it plays in the coming weeks. If it holds like some of these other films have, like ‘Project Hail Mary,’ ‘Michael,’ ‘Obsession,’ it will be in good shape.”

A scene from Scary Movie. PHOTO/@DiscussingFilm/X
A scene from Scary Movie. PHOTO/@DiscussingFilm/X

Meanwhile, the “Obsession” sensation continues. Though it originally opened with Ksh 2.22 billion ($17.2 million), the Focus Features release has exceeded that for four consecutive weekends. It did so again this weekend, collecting Ksh 2.45 billion ($19 million) in ticket sales to bring its North American haul to Ksh 24.34 billion ($188.3 million) and its worldwide total to Ksh 36.84 billion ($286.5 million).

Having cost less than Ksh 129 million ($1 million) to make, “Obsession” ranks among the most profitable releases in recent memory. Focus acquired it for Ksh 1.94 billion ($15 million).

Last weekend’s top film, “Scary Movie,” slid to third place with Ksh 1.87 billion ($14.5 million). The Paramount Pictures release dropped steeply from its opening weekend, down 73%. But with a modest production budget of Ksh 3.87 billion ($30 million), the sequel is already a considerable success. Its two-week domestic total is Ksh 11.45 billion ($88.6 million).

A24’s “Backrooms” added Ksh 1.46 billion ($11.3 million) domestically in its third weekend. It’s rapidly grossed Ksh 33.88 billion ($262.3 million) globally.

Renate Reinsve as Dr. Mary Kline in a scene from Backrooms.PHOTO/https://a24films.com/films

In its second weekend, Amazon MGM’s “Masters of the Universe” fell fast following a disappointing launch. Its box office dropped 71% with Ksh 1.12 billion ($8.7 million). Its two-week domestic total stands at Ksh 6.01 billion ($46.7 million).

Next weekend, The Walt Disney Co.’s “Toy Story 5” opens with big expectations at the box office.

Top 10 movies by domestic box office:

  1. “Disclosure Day,” Ksh 5.68B ($44M)
  2. “Obsession,” Ksh 2.45B ($19M)
  3. “Scary Movie,” Ksh 1.87B ($14.5M)
  4. “Backrooms,” Ksh 1.46B ($11.3M)
  5. “Masters of the Universe,” Ksh 1.12B ($8.7M)
  6. “Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu,” Ksh 611M ($4.7M)
  7. “Michael,” Ksh 529M ($4.1M)
  8. “The Furious,” Ksh 364M ($2.8M)
  9. “Stop! That! Train!,” Ksh 258M ($2M)
  10. “The Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act,” Ksh 232M ($1.8M)

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