It’s-a-hit: ‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ box office blasts off with
$372.5 million globally
[April 06, 2026]
By LINDSEY BAHR
Mixed reviews didn’t dissuade mass audiences from buying tickets to the
“The Super Mario Galaxy Movie,” which scored the biggest opening of the
year for a Hollywood movie. The Illumination and Nintendo co-production
earned $130.9 million over the weekend and a massive $190.1 million in
its first five days in North American theaters, according to studio
estimates Sunday.
Universal Pictures released the sequel globally on Wednesday,
capitalizing on kids’ spring break vacations in the week leading up to
the Easter holiday. With an estimated $182.4 million from 80 overseas
markets, the film is looking at an astronomical $372.5 million debut —
the latest hit for the PG rating. Mexico is leading the international
bunch with $29.1 million from 5,136 screens, followed by the U.K. and
Ireland with $19.7 million.
The animated sequel, Illumination CEO Christopher Meledandri's 16th
movie in 16 years, is the industry’s biggest debut since “Avatar: Fire
and Ash” launched over Christmas. The Chinese movie “Pegasus 3,” which
was not a Motion Picture Association release, has the slight edge for
the 2026 global record, however.
It’s also a dip from the first film, which opened to $204 million
domestically during the same five-day time frame in 2023 ($147 of that
was from Friday, Saturday and Sunday). “The Super Mario Bros. Movie”
went on to be the second biggest movie of 2023, with over $1.3 billion
in box office receipts.

“The Super Mario Galaxy Movie,” which features returning voice actors
Chris Pratt, Jack Black, Anya Taylor-Joy and Charlie Day, had a massive
footprint in the U.S. and Canada, where it played in 4,252 theaters,
including 421 IMAX and 1,345 premium large format screens. It made $15
million from the IMAX screens alone.
“It’s exactly the kind of broad, crowd-pleasing release that brings
people into theatres,” AMC Chairman and CEO Adam Aron said in a
statement.
It also cost around $110 million to make, not including marketing and
promotion expenses. But it arrived on a wave of less-than-stellar
reviews. Its Rotten Tomatoes score is currently sitting at a lousy 40%.
Ticket buyers were more enthusiastic, however.
The family audience gave the movie five out of five stars according to
PostTrak exit polls, while general audiences gave it four stars and an
A- on CinemsScore. Audiences skewed male (61%) overall, although when it
came to families attending there were slightly more moms (52%) than
dads.
“These kind of audience reaction scores just point to a ridiculously
strong run, not only throughout the spring, but likely into the summer
as well,” said Jim Orr, Universal's president of domestic distribution.
“The Super Mario Galaxy Movie” will open in Japan later this month.
Last year, the first weekend in April hosted the launch of another video
game blockbuster, “A Minecraft Movie,” which had a bigger three-day
debut ($162.8 million) but didn’t have a “Project Hail Mary” in a strong
second place, meaning the weekend overall is still up around 5%.
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This image released by Universal Pictures shows Bowser Jr., voiced
by Benny Safdie, in a scene from "The Super Mario Galaxy Movie."
(Nintendo and Illumination/Universal Pictures via AP)
 As expected, “The Super Mario Galaxy
Movie” ended the two-week reign of the Ryan Gosling-led sci-fi hit
“Project Hail Mary,” which landed in second its third weekend in
theaters where it added $30.7 million, bringing its running domestic
total to $217.2 million. Worldwide, it's made $420.7 million to
date.
Third place went to A24’s provocative new movie
“The Drama,” starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, which made an
estimated $14.4 million from 3,087 theaters. The film’s stars have
been on a massive and charming press blitz to promote their R-rated
movie about a engaged couple grappling with an unnerving revelation,
which cost a reported $28 million to produce. The reveal has drummed
up a fair amount of cultural discourse. While reviews have been more
positive than not (82% on Rotten Tomatoes), it got a less promising
B CinemaScore.
“Hoppers” and “Reminders of Him” rounded out the top five. And the
box office outlook looks bright overall, up around 30% from last
year.
“There’s no better opening act for a great summer than a huge month
of April powered by a mega blockbuster like the 'The Super Mario
Galaxy Movie,'" said Paul Dergarabedian, comscore's head of
marketplace trends.
Top 10 movies by domestic box office
With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors
in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and
Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:
1.“The Super Mario Galaxy Movie,” $130.9 million.
2.“Project Hail Mary,” $30.7 million.

3.“The Drama,” $14.4 million.
4.“Hoppers,” $5.8 million.
5.“Reminders of Him,” $2.2 million.
6.“A Great Awakening,” $2.1 million.
7.“They Will Kill You,” $1.9 million.
8.“Dhurandhar The Revenge,” $1.9 million.
9.“Ready or Not 2: Here I Come,” $1.8 million.
10.“Scream 7,” 915,000.
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