Japanese anime feature Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc is off to an impressive start at the U.S. box office, where it opened to an estimated $17.3 million from 3,003 theaters, well ahead of expectations in another win for the genre. The acclaimed manga pic boasts a 96 percent critics score and a 99 percent audience score on Rotten Tomatoes — a rare combo, along with an A CinemaScore.
Since its first launch at the Japanese box office last month, Chainsaw Man — The Movie has already grossed north of $80 million worldwide. Sony and Crunchyroll are handling the movie domestically and in select overseas markets. Produced by the team at MAPPA, the R-rated pic is based on the hit manga-turned-anime TV series that is available to stream in the U.S. on Disney+, Crunchyroll and other platforms.
Chainsaw Man follows the adventures of Denji (Kikunosuke Toya), a teenager and demon hunter who is killed by his overlords, the yakuza. But when his beloved chainsaw-powered, devil-dog Pochita (Shiori Izawa) makes a deal and sacrifices himself, Benji is reborn with the ability to transform parts of his body into chainsaws. Along with violence, the pic doubles as a teenage romance with the arrival of the mysterious Reze. However, Reze is not quite who she seems, and a series of battles ensues that could destroy Tokyo when their love story takes a twisted turn.
Directed by Tatsuya Yoshihara, the film is based on Tatsuki Fujimoto’s original story, with a screenplay by Hiroshi Seko. “It’s safe to say that manga and anime fans won’t be disappointed, even if they’ll inevitably be nitpicking about one narrative aspect or another,” writes THR in its review.
Heading into its U.S. opening, Chainsaw Man was expected to battle Blumhouse and Universal’s holdover hit Black Phone 2 for No. 1 with a debut in the $11 million to $12 million range. But it quickly pulled ahead of the pack thanks to males, who made up 75 percent of all ticket buyers, and younger moviegoers, with more than 50 percent of ticket buyers under the age of 25. It’s also drawing an ethnically diverse audience, including over-indexing among Asian moviegoers (17 percent), according to PostTrak.
In a second surprise twist, holdover Black Phone 2 found itself in a close race with Regretting You — the second Colleen Hoover book adaptation to hit the big screen after 2024’s box office blockbuster It Ends With Us — but ultimately pulled ahead by a narrow margin, according to Sunday estimates.
The pic, a needed win for Blumhouse, fell a scant 52 percent to $13 million for a domestic total of $49.1 million $80.4 million overseas. The Blumhouse and Universal’s release is holding in remarkably well for a horror title, and should continue to take advantage of being the only major studio horror film opening nationwide over the Halloween corridor this year.
Regretting You opened to an estimated $12.9 million domestically and $22.8 million overseas.
Many expected Regretting You to be dinged by generally withering reviews, but the female-fueled pic garnered strong exits on PosTrak and boasts an audience score of 90 percent on Rotten Tomatoes (its CinemaScore, however, was only a B). It’s also clearly benefiting being squarely targeted at women and teenage girls following a glut of male-sewing fare, and is also a testament to Hoover’s continued popularity. (She’s stayed mum on the topic of ongoing legal battle between It Ends With Us director/producer Justin Baldoni and actress/producer Blake Lively). Females made up nearly 85 percent of the audience, while nearly 75 percent of all ticket buyers were under the age of 35.
The new film is described as a romantic drama that speaks to the aspirational theme of living life fully and with no regrets. Constantin Films produced and financed the movie, with Paramount acquiring domestic and certain overseas rights. Internationally, the film opens this week in 40 markets, including the U.K., Australia, Brazil and Mexico.
Disney’s Bruce Springsteen bio-drama Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere had to settle for fourth place in its debut with $9.1 million domestically and $7 million internationally for a global start of $16.1 million. The movie is skewing notably older, which is no surprise, and Disney is confident the pic will have staying power because of its subject matter, originality and strong audience scores.
More than 60 percent of ticket buyers on Friday were 45 and older, including 40 percent over the age of 55. That’s a demo that isn’t known for rushing out to see a film on opening weekend. Its Rotten Tomatoes critics score presently rests at 66 percent; the RT audience score is far stronger at 83 percent. And it earned a B+ CinemaScore.
Springsteen, playing in a total of 3,460 cinemas, had the benefit of playing in 250 IMAX runs and an additional 750 in other premium large-format auditoriums. The music-infused pic stars Jeremy Allen White in the titular role, and he is credited in THR‘s review for giving a “raw and internalized performance as The Boss.” Jeremy Strong, Stephen Graham and Odessa Young also star in director Scott Cooper’s examination of a brutal comedown after a blockbuster tour, which yielded the prolific musician’s most personal album.
It remains to be seen how much of an impact the first two games of this year’s World Series — which pits the Los Angeles Dodgers against the Toronto Blue Jays — had on the weekend box office. Generally speaking, NFL games pose far more competition. At the same time, L.A. is the largest moviegoing market alongside New York City (it is also the biggest market for anime). Friday night’s opening game of the World Series, as well as Saturday’s, are both in Toronto.
At the specialty box office, Neon launched Shelby Oaks in 1,823 locations. Marking YouTube movie critic Chris Stuckmann‘s debut feature, the found-footage pic opened to a solid $2.4 million. So far, its main claim to fame is that it raised $1.4 million via a Kickstarter campaign, the highest amount ever for a horror title, per the crowd-sourcing platform. Neon later provided some additional funds.
Focus Features’ awards contender Bugonia is also making headlines in its limited debut at the specialty box office, and is reporting an estimated opening per-location average of $40,588 from 17 cinemas, one of the best platform starts of the year to date (it will also be the top location average of the weekend by a long shot). Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, the acclaimed film stars Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons.
Oct. 25, 9:30 a.m.: Updated with revised estimates.
Oct. 26, 8:17a.m.: Updated with revised Sunday estimates.
This story was originally published Oct. 24 at 6:43 p.m.





