Every now and then, the box office delivers a story that makes Hollywood’s usual logic look a little foolish. Right now, that story is Obsession.
Curry Barker’s low-budget horror breakout was not supposed to be the loudest talking point of the Memorial Day frame. It did not arrive with a giant franchise name, a superhero-sized marketing machine, or a cast built around global movie stars. It arrived as a strange, nasty, word-of-mouth horror film — and somehow became one of the most fascinating box office stories of the year.
The really unusual part is not just that it opened well. It is that the film appears to be growing after release.
A Horror Movie That Refused to Drop
Most horror films follow a familiar pattern. The fans rush out early, the opening weekend does the heavy lifting, and the second weekend usually brings the fall. That is normal. That is expected. That is how the genre often works.

Obsession has refused to behave that way.
According to recent Memorial Day box office reports, the film rose sharply in its second weekend, with estimates placing its increase at around 30 percent. Some box office analysis has pointed even higher, with figures close to 39 percent depending on the weekend estimate being used.
Either way, that is extremely rare for a wide horror release. Horror movies are supposed to fall in weekend two. Obsession climbed.
That alone would be impressive. The budget makes it almost absurd.
A Tiny Budget, a Huge Return
The film was reportedly made for less than $1 million, with several reports putting the production budget in the $750,000 to $1 million range. For a modern theatrical release backed by a major distributor, that is tiny money.
Yet the Obsession box office total has already climbed far beyond what most micro-budget horror titles can realistically dream of. The Numbers lists a $1 million production budget, while Fangoria reported that the film had reached roughly $79 million worldwide after two weekends.
That does not simply make Obsession profitable. It puts the film into the kind of profit-margin conversation that horror producers love and studio accountants probably stare at for a long time.
Because when a film costs almost nothing by studio standards and starts making tens of millions, it stops being just a hit. It becomes a case study.
The Blair Witch and Paranormal Activity Comparison
The obvious names are already being mentioned: The Blair Witch Project and Paranormal Activity.
That comparison gets thrown around too often, but in this case it makes sense. Those films became legends because they proved that horror can do something other genres rarely manage. It can turn a small idea, a limited budget and the right public reaction into a financial monster.
The trick is that it cannot feel fake. Audiences have to feel like they discovered the film, or at least like they are joining something that is already spreading without permission.
That seems to be exactly where Obsession has landed.
This is not just about trailers or posters. This is about reaction. Curiosity. Group chats. TikTok clips. People telling other people they have to see it before the conversation moves on.
Why the Audience Shift Matters
The audience numbers help explain why the movie is holding so well. Reports suggest that the female share of the audience increased in the second weekend, while younger moviegoers continued to drive turnout.
That matters because the 18–34 audience does not just watch a film and go home. They post about it. They argue over it. They send reactions, warnings, theories and clips. If a movie gives them something to talk about, they can turn it into an event almost overnight.

A studio can buy awareness. It can buy ads, banners, interviews and trailers. What it cannot easily buy is the feeling that everyone is suddenly talking about a movie and you are missing out if you do not see it.
That feeling is difficult to manufacture. Obsession seems to have found it naturally.
And Then There Was The Mandalorian and Grogu
The weekend becomes even more interesting when you place Obsession next to The Mandalorian and Grogu.
The Star Wars film still ruled the frame, opening with around $100 million across four days in North America and roughly $165 million worldwide. Those are strong numbers, and for a franchise title with a more controlled budget than some recent blockbuster bets, the commercial path still looks realistic.
But the more surprising story belongs to the smaller film.
A Star Wars movie opening big is expected. That is what Star Wars is built to do. A micro-budget horror film increasing its audience in weekend two is different. That is the sort of box office behavior that makes people in the industry stop and pay attention.
Could Obsession Become a Historic Horror Profit Story?
The real question now is how long this can continue.
If Obsession holds well again, it could become one of the most profitable horror movies of the decade. If the online conversation keeps building, the all-time low-budget horror discussion may not be out of reach either.
Of course, this is not a formula anyone can simply copy. Viral success always looks obvious after it happens. Before it happens, nobody really knows which film will catch fire. Plenty of clever horror movies arrive every year with good reviews, smart marketing and strong concepts, and most of them never break out like this.

But Obsession has clearly found the right mix: a cheap production, a strong hook, a young audience, positive genre buzz and enough mystery to keep people talking.
Its critical momentum also helps. The film has been performing strongly on Rotten Tomatoes, while industry coverage has increasingly framed Curry Barker as one of the breakout horror names to watch.
Hollywood Will Be Watching
Hollywood will study this run. Horror producers will study it even more closely. Because sometimes the smartest box office bet is not the biggest one. Sometimes it is not the safest franchise, the most expensive campaign, or the loudest release on the calendar.
Sometimes it is the strange little movie nobody expected to dominate the conversation.
And right now, Obsession is doing exactly that.
