Skip to main content

Box office hits and misses: Star Wars stays on top despite a tough challenge from The Revenant

weekend box office revenant star wars the
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Star Wars: The Force Awakens remained on top of the box-office rankings for the fourth straight week, but Leonardo DiCaprio’s gritty, Oscar-friendly Western The Revenant gave it an impressive run with a weekend so big that it actually looked like it might top the sci-fi saga’s sequel at one point.

While The Revenant and its $38 million takeaway didn’t end up dethroning The Force Awakens ($41.6 million) for the weekend, it did manage to become the first film to top J.J. Abrams’ blockbuster for a single day since the film was released. The wide release of DiCaprio and Birdman director Alejandro González Iñárritu’s brutal frontier drama earned more than $14.3 million on Friday night, pushing past the $10.7 million earned by The Force Awakens that day but ultimately following short of the full-weekend honor.

While this wasn’t exactly an opening weekend for The Revenant, which has been in limited release (with screenings at fewer than 10 theaters) for several weeks now, it was the widest release for the film so far — which should give studio 20th Century Fox some warm feelings about its box-office potential down the road. If you count this weekend as the film’s “opening weekend,” The Revenant goes into the record books as the fourth-biggest debut of any film starring DiCaprio. (Shutter Island, The Great Gatsby, and Inception all had bigger opening weekends.)

# Title Weekend U.S. Total Worldwide Total
1. Star Wars: The Force Awakens $41.6M $812M $1,733M
2. The Revenant $38M $39.6M $59.7M
3. Daddy’s Home $15M $116.3M $154.2M
4. The Forest $13.1M $13.1M $13.1M
5. Sisters $7.2M $74.9M $83.1M
6. The Hateful Eight $6.4M $41.5M $41.5M
7. The Big Short $6.3M $42.8M $52.5M
8. Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Road Chip $5.5M $75.6M $111.8M
9. Joy $4.5M $46.6M $70.7M
10. Concussion $3.1M $31M $32.4M

The only true new release to make it into the weekend’s top 10 films was the horror tale The Forest, which earned a respectable $13.1 million for its no-caveats opening weekend. The film stars Game of Thrones actress Natalie Dormer, and with a budget of just $10 million it’s likely to turn a tidy profit for its studio.

The other Western everyone’s talking about didn’t fare nearly as well as The Revenant, with Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight taking a surprising hit despite expanding into more theaters. Last week, the film earned more than $15.7 million from screenings in 2,474 theaters, only to earn just over $6.3 million this weekend after adding 464 additional theaters to its run. That’s certainly not a good sign for the film, which has received positive reviews but might be getting pushed off audiences’ collective radar due to all of the buzz surrounding The Revenant right now.

So, now that The Revenant fell short, which upcoming film is most likely to end the reign of The Force Awakens?

Quite a few pundits are predicting that Ice Cube and Kevin Hart’s comedy sequel Ride Along 2 — debuting this upcoming weekend — will knock Star Wars out of the top spot at the box office for at least one week. The original, 2014 film was a massive hit for Universal Pictures and made a big splash with a $41.5 million opening weekend that turned into an impressive $154.4 million worldwide gross. (Not bad for a film made for $25 million.) Box-office prognosticators seem to believe even bigger things are in store for the film’s sequel, which could mean a second-place finish for Star Wars next week.

Still, with The Force Awakens now just $270 million short of crossing the $2 billion mark — a feat achieved by only two other movies in history — the race is far from over for the Star Wars sequel.

Editors' Recommendations

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
7 best 2010s fantasy movies, ranked
Neville, Hermione, Ron, and Harry inside a dark tunnel in HP and the Deathly Hallows Part 2.

For the fantasy genre, the 2010s were a time of both bittersweet endings and exciting beginnings. Dominated by epic franchises that would captivate fans across the globe, there were significant contributions to the genre and cinema as a whole from that era. Of course, there were also acclaimed standalone fantasy movies from talented directors who would use the best aspects of the genre while pushing its boundaries.

From the magical clash within Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows to the captivating story of The Shape of Water, the best fantasy movies of the 2010s offer spectacular and otherworldly viewing experiences for audiences of all ages. Full of rich fantastical realms, well-written heroes and foes, and spell-binding stories, these films have cemented their place in cinematic history as must-see significant entries in the fantasy genre.
7. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012)

Read more
What’s new on Amazon Prime Video in May 2024
Nicholas Galitzine and Anne Hathaway in The Idea of You.

Unlike some other streaming services in May, Amazon Prime Video is giving subscribers all of the movies that they can handle. Everything from classic Westerns like 3:10 To Yuma and comedies like Airplane! to dramas like Cold Mountain and more are arriving on May 1. Even the German thriller Run Lola Run is back on Prime Video. And if you haven't seen it yet, you should -- it's terrific.

Prime Video is also premiering new originals in May, including Anne Hathaway's new romantic drama The Idea of You, as well as Outer Range season 2, The GOAT, and Clarkson's Farm. George Clooney's period drama The Boys in The Boat is also arriving on Prime Video this month, but not until May 28.

Read more
If you have to watch one Hulu show this May, stream this one
A man in an office looks worried in Under the Banner of Heaven.

While it doesn't boast a subscriber count in the hundreds of millions like some of its competitors, Hulu remains one of the premier streaming services for quality television. The Handmaid's Tale became the first TV show from a streaming service to win the Emmy for Outstanding Drama Series. The Bear and Only Murders in the Building have also been critical darlings and audience favorites. While these three shows are excellent, you should add another show, Under the Banner of Heaven, to your watchlist in May.

Created by Oscar winner Dustin Lance Black, Under the Banner of Heaven stars Andrew Garfield as Jeb Pyre, a Utah detective tasked with investigating the murder of Brenda Wright Lafferty (Daisy Edgar-Jones) and her baby daughter. The mysterious circumstances surrounding the murders may involve prominent members of the Mormon Church. The series is based on Jon Krakauer's 2003 nonfiction book.

Read more