‘Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ Shoots For Stars, Eyes Biggest Global Weekend Opening YTD With $350M – Box Office Preview

Bigger than an expanding mushroom or a giant-sized Mario, the box office is literally going to explode over the Easter stretch in the positive sense of the word as Illumination/Nintendo/Universal‘s The Super Mario Galaxy Movie is set to do around $350M around world. Broken out that’s $175M over five days in the U.S./Canada at 4,000 theaters and another $175M in 79 markets sans Japan (that market will go later on April 24 timed to Golden Week holidays). Yes, Super Mario Galaxy Movie will have all the hammering power of Imax and PLF screens.
Super Mario Galaxy Movie will clearly post the biggest opening YTD around the world for an MPA title, ahead of Project Hail Mary‘s $141M, but it’s arguably the best overall for the year, ahead of China’s Pegasus 3 which did $152M over its 3-day weekend, largely from the Middle Kingdom.
We’re hearing that U.S. advance ticket sales are slightly ahead of the first 2023 movie which also opened over the Wednesday-Sunday Easter stretch to a 3-day of $146.1M, and $204.6M over 5-days. Tracking and Uni do not want to call the sequel yet as a slam dunk $200M+ 5-day opening, but the forecasts look pretty damn good for a part two. In regards to the first movie, on a worldwide basis, the reported opening of $377.2M (not-adjusted for currency swings or inflation) repped a record opening for an Illumination Animation movie. We’ll have more details on likes-for-likes in a bit.
No previews on this one in North America, unless you count a handful of 12:01 AM shows on Wednesday. First choice is best with guys under 25 and women over 25 (indicating the mom quotient). Next to Super Mario Bros‘ first choice young men here are one point above that 2023 movie, while there’s a bigger first choice from moms. Super Mario Bros in North America posted a first day of $31.7M.
Male moviegoers showed up at 60% for the 2023 movie, with 62% between 18-34, and the largest quad being 18-24 years old at 33%. Diversity demos showed Latino and Hispanic moviegoers led the charge last time at 41%, followed by Caucasian at 30%, Black at 15%, and Asian/other at 14%. Super Mario Bros played strong on the East and West coasts (though it was great everywhere), with eight of the top ten theaters during its opening weekend coming from California.
Also opening wide in a big way at around 3,000 locations is A24’s Zendaya and Robert Pattinson absurdist romantic drama, The Drama, from Dream Scenario Norwegian filmmaker Kristoffer Borgli. Advance ticket sales are ahead of A24’s The Materialists ($11.3M) and Zendaya’s non-IP romance movie, Challengers ($15M). However, The Drama doesn’t have Imax like Challengers did. Pattinson and Zendaya play a couple, about to tie the knot. But he learns something about her at the last minute. It’s not a traditional romance film, but the movie is right in line with the audaciousness that Euphoria fans have come to know Zendaya for. Outlook is around $12M.
No Rotten Tomatoes scores on either Super Mario Galaxy movie or Drama yet.
Amazon MGM Studios’ Project Hail Mary will continue to defy gravity with around $30M+ in weekend 3. The studio will hold 70MM screens and some PLFs. Imax goes to the plumbers.
Working to all cinemas and studios’ advantage is that K-12 schools will go on break at 71% on Friday/49% on Monday while colleges respectively are 34% and 9% on break both days.



