It is rare to see a weekend like this at the American box office. A24’s horror film Backrooms opened to a staggering $81.4 million domestically, smashing the studio’s all-time opening record, while Obsession grew again in its third weekend. Two horror films broke through at the same time, and neither looks like a normal studio-engineered franchise event.
This was not a series of coincidences. It was the spectacular eruption of a generational shift in taste. The Backrooms box office explosion and the continued Obsession box office rise suggest that internet-native horror is no longer a niche theatrical experiment. It is becoming one of the most powerful forces in mainstream moviegoing.
Backrooms: How a YouTuber Made $81 Million on Opening Weekend
Kane Parsons is 20 years old. A few years ago, he was building the Backrooms creepypasta mythology as a YouTube creator, turning liminal spaces, yellow corridors and digital unease into one of the internet’s most recognizable horror worlds. This weekend, he became the youngest filmmaker ever to top the domestic box office charts.
The A24 horror film — centered on the discovery of a seemingly infinite network of eerie yellow corridors beneath a furniture store, starring Oscar nominees Chiwetel Ejiofor and Renate Reinsve alongside Emmy winner Mark Duplass — opened to $81.4 million domestically and $118 million globally.
To put that in perspective, A24’s previous all-time domestic opening record was held by Civil War in 2024, with $25.5 million. Backrooms earned more than three times that. The film is now one of the biggest domestic openings of 2026 and one of the most remarkable horror debuts ever recorded.
The real story, however, is not just the number. It is where that number came from. Backrooms did not arrive as a legacy sequel, a superhero property or a familiar remake. It came from internet mythology, YouTube-era filmmaking and an audience that already understood the language of the film before the first trailer hit the mainstream.
That is what makes the Backrooms result so important. Gen Z and Gen Alpha are increasingly using theaters to experience internet culture on the big screen. For younger audiences, the distance between a YouTube-born horror concept and a theatrical event is no longer very large. In fact, it may now be one of the shortest paths to cultural urgency.
Obsession: The Micro-Budget Film That Grew Again
If Backrooms is the event, Obsession is the phenomenon. Curry Barker’s low-budget thriller grew again in its third weekend, rising to $27.4 million and pushing its domestic total to $105.7 million. In an industry where most films begin to collapse after opening weekend, Obsession has done the opposite.
The vast majority of films enter a steep second-weekend decline. Horror films, even successful ones, often burn hot and fast. Obsession has turned that logic upside down. It has expanded through word of mouth, online conversation and the kind of audience enthusiasm that cannot be manufactured by a traditional marketing campaign alone.
That is why the Obsession story may be even more revealing than the Backrooms launch. Backrooms had the shock of a massive opening. Obsession has something rarer: sustained theatrical momentum. When a film grows in its second and third weekends, it means viewers are not just showing up because of hype. They are telling other people to go.
Focus Features now has one of the most unexpected box office stories of the year. A film built from a younger, internet-aware horror sensibility has outperformed the expectations usually attached to far bigger studio machinery. It is a reminder that theatrical success in 2026 is no longer determined only by budget, IP ownership or franchise history.
The Mandalorian and the Rest of the Weekend
The contrast became even sharper when placed next to Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu. The Disney and Lucasfilm release dropped 70.1% in its second frame, earning $24.45 million. Its $136.8 million cumulative domestic total still gives Disney a significant theatrical result, but the optics of the weekend were impossible to ignore.
A24’s internet-born horror film opened above it. Focus Features’ low-budget horror breakout stayed ahead of it. The biggest conversation of the weekend was not about a galaxy far, far away. It was about yellow rooms, obsessive dread and a new generation of filmmakers who learned how to command attention online before Hollywood fully understood what they were building.
Elsewhere, Michael added $11.86 million in its sixth weekend, pushing its domestic total to $340 million. The broader marketplace remained strong, but the shape of that strength was the real headline. Horror did not simply perform well. It led the conversation.
One Weekend That Pointed the Way Forward
The May 29–31 weekend pointed toward a larger shift in theatrical taste. Internet-native films with strong online cultural roots are now capable of outpacing major studio franchise juggernauts. They do not need to behave like traditional four-quadrant blockbusters to become theatrical events. They need urgency, identity and an audience that feels ownership before opening night.
Backrooms and Obsession together signal something important: Hollywood’s most valuable moviegoing audience in 2026 may not be the traditional multiplex demographic studios have chased for decades. It may be the under-25 viewer arriving from the internet, already fluent in the mythology, the memes, the tone and the fear.
That viewer knows exactly what they want to see. And this weekend, they bought a ticket for it.
The lesson is simple but disruptive. The future of theatrical horror may not come from the next recycled franchise title. It may come from a creator uploading strange images to YouTube, a micro-budget filmmaker building a cult audience online, or a story that first spreads through screens much smaller than a cinema screen.
This weekend, those smaller screens sent two horror films to the top of the box office. Hollywood should pay attention.
