‘Scary Movie’ laughs its way to a first-place finish at the box office
With the Wayans brothers firmly back in the driverβs seat, horror parody βScary Movieβ muscled its way past He-Man for the top spot at the box office this weekend.
The reboot of the 2000s-era franchise β or βrebootiquel,β as the movie calls itself β brought in $55 million in the U.S. and Canada for a worldwide total of $105.5 million, according to studio estimates. The movie, which had a production budget of $30 million, beat studio expectations and marks the return of the Wayans brothers to βScary Movie.β
The franchise was developed by Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans and Keenen Ivory Wayans. But after 2001βs βScary Movie 2,β the Wayans got in a pay dispute with former Miramax executives Bob and Harvey Weinstein. The Wayans have said the Weinsteins did not tell them that 2003βs βScary Movie 3β would be made without them. The franchise then continued with fourth and fifth installments.
After former MGM film executive Jonathan Glickman was named chief executive of Miramax in 2024, he reached out to Marlon Wayans to see if heβd be interested in reviving βScary Movie.β
βAlways dreamt of having this moment again,β Wayans said, while thanking Glickman and executive producer Marc Weinstock during a short speech at the movieβs premiere. βI thank you guys for having the vision to go, thereβs only one way to do the next βScary Movie,β and thatβs to bring the Wayans family back.β
Miramax led the production and financing of the film, while Paramount Pictures was the distributor.
Amazon MGM Studiosβ βMasters of the Universeβ came in second at the domestic box office with $29.3 million, in Mattel Studiosβ first film in theaters since the 2023 smash hit βBarbie.β Globally, the movie made $54 million.
The action adventure movie had a production budget of about $170 million and aimed to reintroduce the β80s-era action hero βHe-Manβ to a new audience, while also driving the nostalgia of adults who played with the franchise toys or watched the original film and series. The movie is part of Mattel Inc.βs strategy to continue extending its toy brands into the entertainment arena.
Mattel Chief Executive Ynon Kreiz said last week that βMasters of the Universeβ didnβt need to match the success of βBarbieβ βto have a meaningful economic impact on the company.β
A24βs runaway hit βBackroomsβ came in third at the box office this weekend, continuing its strong performance with a haul of $25.9 million. Focus Featuresβ βObsessionβ ($25.6 million) and another YouTube-native property, βThe Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act,β ($12.7 million) rounded out the top five at the box office, according to Comscore data.