Through this point in 2026, the domestic box office has posted an encouraging gain, running roughly 12 percent ahead of the same stretch last year. That is welcome news for Hollywood, but studios may also want to step back and examine what is driving those numbers, because signs are emerging that the marketplace is undergoing a meaningful change.
A look at the year’s top performers reveals a notable pattern: newer, less-established projects are not merely finding an audience, they are making a real mark. For the traditional studio system, that should be read as an early warning that the business is shifting in real time.
At the same time, several presumed blockbusters now in theaters are failing to meet expectations. A month ago, Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu debuted respectably, opening just under $100 million. But in its second weekend, the film plunged 70 percent, and the slide only deepened from there. By weekend three, it had lost nearly 1,000 screens, an almost unheard-of development for a Star Wars or Disney release, especially for a studio that typically secures screen counts for at least a month.
Masters of the Universe, the latest effort to revive the He-Man brand on the big screen, is also underperforming. Despite carrying a budget comparable to the Mandalorian feature, it is faring even worse. Both movies are increasingly being viewed as financial disappointments for their studios, but that is not the most striking part of the story. The bigger takeaway is that moviegoing remains healthy even as major franchise titles stumble.
What 2026 is making clear is that smaller productions from relatively unknown creators, often made on shoestring budgets, are delivering the kinds of films audiences actually want to watch. The impact is doing more than attracting attention; it may be forcing a serious rethink across Hollywood.
A few months ago, during an appearance on the Hollywood In Toto podcast with host Christian Toto, I spoke about the potential for exactly this kind of breakout filmmaking. We discussed how audience preferences have continued to evolve since the COVID lockdown era, and how a new wave of ticket buyers has been shaped by YouTube and TikTok. I noted then that these viewers also seemed likely to become the next generation of filmmakers, with the main obstacle being whether studios would be willing to distribute their work.
These creators now appear to be making their breakthrough into the marketplace. Things began early when, in January, one feature found success. Iron Lung came out to little Hollywood fanfare, but it found an audience while being produced largely by a one-man entity, Markiplier. This is the moniker for YouTube success story, Mark Fischbach. Adapting the plot from the video game of the same name, Markiplier funded, produced, and even released the film himself.
He managed to generate a word-of-mouth push for screentime, and ultimately, his film appeared on over 3,000 screens. On a budget just under $5 million, it grossed ten times that amount. Impressive, but not all that shocking. But the shocks would arrive as the summer blockbuster frame opened.
Focus Features took a small risk on a cheap horror option called Obsession, made by YouTube sketch comedy performer Curry Barker. After making a horror short film on his video channel, he was approached by producer James Harris about adapting that concept, but instead, Curry pitched a new idea, about a prospective lover using a mystical object to gain affection.
You only get one wish.✨
Join Focus Insider to enter: pic.twitter.com/5UEKu2k5vS
— Focus Features (@FocusFeatures) May 22, 2026
After a film festival debut last fall, Focus Features secured the rights and released Obsession on May 15. The film stunned industry experts, who projected an $8 million haul for the weekend; it more than doubled that figure. Then the unusual return occurred as the film promptly increased that total on its second weekend, and then beat that figure in week-3. To date, this film has pulled just about $200 million domestic, and another $100 million internationally – on a budget of $750,000.
Right behind that came ‘Backrooms, the release from 20-year-old Kane Parsons. As a teenager, Parsons created a web series by the same name, about a person entering a realm of empty spaces. Production companies came calling, and studio A24 headed the group, giving Parsons directorial control and a budget of around $10 million. Then something happened.
REVIEW: ‘Backrooms’ Is Everything I’ve Wanted in a Movie, and Everything Hollywood Left Behind
Projections for the film had it opening with a surprising $20 million debut. It promptly went on to break the $80 million mark in its first weekend, making for A24’s best-ever debut, and Parsons became the youngest director ever to have the #1 film in theaters. In just over two weeks, it has grossed over $250 million globally.
All told, across three pictures, you have $600 million in business, off of barely $15 million in shooting budgets. These were delivered by completely unproven creators, working off of content they crafted online. Original properties are catering to an audience seeking out methods and genres that appear foreign to Hollywood, and they are striking a vein of business.
As AI becomes more prevalent and the ability to craft visuals and tell stories that rival what the big Hollywood players put out, these could be the types of motion pictures that rule theaters. The majors should recognize this threat as smaller outfits like A24 are looking at these fertile environments for product and talent, and they are beating them in their own arena. Hollywood could be a completely different entity in a very short period of time.
Editor’s Note: Hollywood, academia, and liberal elites are out of touch with the average American.
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