Saturday, March 28, 2026
Home / Entertainment / Box Office: ‘Project Hail Mary’ Enjoys Epic Hold f...
Entertainment

Box Office: ‘Project Hail Mary’ Enjoys Epic Hold for $53M Weekend as ‘They Will Kill You’ Gets Murdered

CN
CitrixNews Staff
·
Box Office: ‘Project Hail Mary’ Enjoys Epic Hold for $53M Weekend as ‘They Will Kill You’ Gets Murdered
Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in Project Hail Mary Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in 'Project Hail Mary.' Jonathan Olley/Amazon Content Services

Project Hail Mary continues its out-of-this-world box office performance.

After earning $14.6 million on Friday, the Ryan Gosling-led movie — based on Andy Weir’s book — is on course to decline a scant 34 percent to $53.1 million to boast the best hold in recent memory for movies that opened in the same range, including Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer (54 percent) and 2024’s Dune: Part 2 (44 percent).

That would put Project Hail Mary‘s worldwide cume well north of $200 million through Sunday, including an anticipated $137 million domestically and more than $100 million at the international box office.

Related Stories

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in Project Hail Mary Movies

Why Has 'Project Hail Mary' Ignited So Much Online Debate?

Ryan Gosling attends the world premiere of ‘Project Hail Mary’ at London’s Cineworld Leicester Square on March 9, 2026. Movies

Ryan Gosling to Star in Daniels' Sci-Fi Event Film for Universal

Opening well ahead of expectations last weekend, the Phil Lord and Christopher Miller-directed Project Hail Mary blasted off with a domestic launch of $80.6 million, the best showing of the year to date and the second-best in a decade for a non-sequel or franchise title behind Oppenheimer ($52.5 million). Gosling’s top-grossing film of all time, of course, is Barbie, but Project Hail Mary is his biggest domestic opening featuring the actor in a leading role, not adjusted for inflation. It is also a domestic best for Lord and Miller.

Hail Mary is also performing ahead of expectations overseas, where sci-fi is a notoriously tough genre to sell in certain European countries, as well as key regions in Latin America and Asia. The film launched to $60.4 million from 80 markets at the foreign box office for a global launch of roughly $141 million, also the best start of 2026 so far for a Hollywood title.

And just as in the U.S., Project Hail Mary‘s wit and heartwarming undercurrents are leading to the sort of unanticipated, collective word-of-mouth that can ignite moviegoing. On Friday, for example, the film grossed $11.7 million overseas, up four percent from the previous Friday despite adding more territories, for an international tally of $98.7 million in 86 markets.

Sandra Hüller stars in Lord and Miller’s sci-fi epic based on the Andy Weir novel about a science teacher who wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: Solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction … but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

The sci-fi epic stars Gosling as an ostracized biologist now teaching high school who is tapped by the head of an international consortium (Sandra Hüller) to help stop the sun from dimming and ushering in another ice age. Gosling’s character doesn’t remember any of this upon awaking to find himself alone on a ship hurtling through space. The rest of the crew has died, but he proceeds and discovers an alien life form that is trying to solve the same problem. They unite and learn to communicate — he nicknames his new, craggy-looking friend “Rocky” (the merchandising possibilities are more than tantalizing should Hail Mary transform into a franchise).

Multiple sources say a franchise is a possibility. On that front, Weir has said he has ideas for a sequel, but to date, there are no official conversations between the author — who is in the drivers’s seat in terms of all things related to Hail Mary — but insiders say a sequel is far from out of the question.

The movie arrives at a defining moment for Amazon MGM, which is on the verge of becoming a major Hollywood studio just as David Ellison‘s Skydance, the new owner of Paramount, prepares to also buy Warner Bros. While he says he will keep the two studios separate, no one is sure what that exactly means. (By all accounts, a vertical merger of this size would be heavily scrutinized by Washington regulators, but President Donald Trump has publicly praised David Ellison’s merger plans, and is in frequent touch with close friend and billionaire Ellison, Larry’s father.)

Elsewhere, Hoppers is set to gross another $11 million-$12 million this weekend for a domestic tally of $137.3 million as it continues to redeem Pixar’s ability to turn out original fare (Elio‘s entire domestic cume was $72.9 million).

Duking it out for third place are They Will Kill You and two holdovers: Dhurandhar: ThRevenge, the latest installment in the Indian action-thriller starring Ranveer Singh; and Universal’s movie adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s Reminders of Him.

The Warners-owned New Line and Skydance’s genre label partnered on They Will Kill You long before talks of a merger. The new action-horror-comedy follows Satan-worship tenants living in a luxury New York City building who perform ritualistic killings of their mostly poor and marginalized staff. Filmmaker Kirill Sokolov (Why Don’t You Just Die!) directed from a script he co-wrote with Alex Litvak. The film has an okay 79 percent audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, while the 67 percent critics’ score is also in the fresh zone. While solid, PostTrak exits aren’t spectacular either.

Another problem for They Will Kill You: Searchlight Pictures’ horror-comedy Ready or Not 2: Here I Come is only in its second weekend after opening to a somewhat better $9.1 million domestically.

THR Newsletters

Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day

Subscribe Sign Up

Originally reported by Hollywood Reporter