Weekend Box Office: Wuthering Heights takes the top spot but opens (slightly) under expectations

Wuthering Heights, first reactionsWuthering Heights, first reactions

As expected, Emerald Fennell’s controversial, loose adaptation of Wuthering Heights easily topped the box office this weekend. Yet its $34.8 million three-day opening is being viewed as somewhat underwhelming. Industry insiders had projected a $50 million four-day haul over the President’s Day holiday, but the film will be lucky to hit $40 million — which is exactly what we predicted.

Now, a $34 million debut still sounds terrific for a period epic with a relatively reasonable $80 million production budget. However, reports suggest the marketing spend may have exceeded the production cost (some estimate it at $85 million). Add in two major stars — Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi — and many expected a bigger splash.

While the film likely benefited from solid Valentine’s Day turnout, its B CinemaScore suggests mixed word-of-mouth. The big question now: will it have legs next weekend?

Sony’s GOAT Nips at the Heels

Sony’s animated feature GOAT opened strong with $26 million, and its four-day total is expected to come within a few million of Wuthering Heights. Many believe it could leapfrog the period romance by next weekend, especially with a relatively quiet frame ahead.

The film’s stylish animation — reminiscent of Spider-Verse and KPop Demon Hunters — appears to be resonating with younger audiences.

Crime 101

Crime 101 Delivers Solid Counterprogramming

Amazon/MGM’s Crime 101 debuted to a solid $15.1 million, landing on the higher end of expectations. The Don Winslow adaptation is benefiting from strong reviews (including ours), though it faces a long road toward recouping its reported $90 million budget.

That said, Amazon likely views the film as a long-term streaming asset rather than a pure theatrical play.

Send Help Holds Exceptionally Well

Sam Raimi’s Send Help posted one of the weekend’s most impressive holds. In its third frame, it grossed $8.9 million — just a 1% drop from last weekend — bringing its total to just shy of $50 million. That’s an excellent result for an R-rated thriller.

Meanwhile, Kevin James’ Solo Mio dipped only 9% to $6.4 million, pushing its total to $16.9 million. A strong hold for Angel Studios.

Family and Genre Titles Continue Steady Runs

Zootopia 2 added another $3.7 million, bringing its total to $419 million.

Avatar: Fire and Ash landed in eighth place with $3.3 million and is just shy of $400 million total — a milestone it should cross next weekend.

Iron Lung is beginning to wind down with $3.1 million, bringing its impressive total to $37.2 million.

Rounding out the top ten, Luc Besson’s Dracula held solidly, dropping only 32% to $3 million, with a $9 million total — making it one of Vertical Entertainment’s higher-grossing releases.

Specialty Releases: Mixed Results

Briarcliff’s release of Gore Verbinski’s Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die (which we loved) earned a decent $3.6 million on 1,610 screens.

It outperformed Cold Storage, starring Liam Neeson and Joe Keery, which opened outside the top ten with $1.1 million.

Interestingly, Neon’s Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie pulled in $1.2 million on just 365 screens — a strong per-screen average and a notable specialty success (perExhibitor Relations).

What did you see this weekend? Let us know in the comments!

# MOVIE TITLE WKND $ TOTAL $
1 Wuthering Heights $34.8 M $34.8 M
2 GOAT $26 M $26 M
3 Crime 101 $15.1 M $15.1 M
4 Send Help $8.96 M $47.8 M
5 Solo Mio $6.4 M $16.9 M
6 Zootopia 2 $3.76 M $419.37 M
7 Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die $3.6 M $3.6 M
8 Avatar: Fire and Ash $3.32 M $396 M
9 Iron Lung $3.1 M $37.2 M
10 Dracula $3 M $9 M
Source: ComScore

About the Author

Editor-in-Chief - JoBlo

Favorite Movies: Goodfellas, A Clockwork Orange, Boogie Nights, Goldfinger, Casablanca, Scarface (83 version), read more Heat, The Guns of Navarone, The Dirty Dozen, Pulp Fiction, Taxi Driver, Blade Runner, any film noir

Likes: Movies, LP's, James Bond, true hollywood memoirs, The Bret Easton read more Ellis Podcast, every sixties british pop band, every 80s new wave band - in fact just generally all eighties songs, even the really shit ones, and of course, Tom Friggin' Cruise!

The comment section exists to allow readers to discuss the article constructively and respectfully, focused on the topic at hand.

What’s Not Allowed

  • Abusive language, insults, or harassment toward other users or staff.
  • Hate speech of any kind is strictly prohibited.
  • Bickering, bullying, personal attacks, or baiting others to argue
  • Extended off-topic debates, especially those centered on politics or religion rather than the article topic
  • No AI content or SPAM