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What did Obsession do at the box office?

Obsession keeps stacking wins after its debut

After breaking out as a major horror title, Obsession is continuing to grow at the box office in follow-up weeks rather than fading after an initial spike.

The coverage describes a clear pattern: the film maintained momentum with a “shock” Week 3 boost, keeping it in the conversation as one of the standout genre performers of the moment. That kind of late-week lift typically indicates that the movie’s audience reach is widening—whether through stronger word-of-mouth, expanded theater counts, or audiences re-engaging after seeing trailers and reviews.

This matters beyond one title because it’s happening alongside another horror-driven box office story: Backrooms’ record-setting run. When multiple horror releases are performing strongly at the same time, studios and exhibitors often take it as evidence that the genre can still deliver theatrical returns at scale—especially when the films have distinct premises and recognizable horror hooks.

For viewers, the practical takeaway is timing: the ongoing growth signals that Obsession remains a worthwhile theatrical priority rather than a “catch it later” title. For the industry, it strengthens the argument that horror concepts built for modern audiences can translate to big screen demand quickly and sustain it.

Overall, the key point is that Obsession didn’t just open; it kept improving its position, including a notable Week 3 upswing that helped it remain visible in the crowded weekend cycle.


Curated by Humans | Summarized by Machines