Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
A new horror film called 'Obsession' was in cinemas this weekend. It was made by a young YouTuber named Curry Barker. This is his first movie.
The film cost only one million dollars to make. But this weekend it earned about sixteen million dollars in cinemas in the United States and Canada. That is sixteen times more than its cost.
Critics and viewers like the film a lot. It got a high score on the website Rotten Tomatoes. People who saw it gave it an A-minus grade.
'Obsession' was third at the box office. The number-one film this weekend was 'Michael'. The news is from May 17, 2026.
- horror film
- a movie made to frighten or scare the people who watch it
- cinema
- a building where people pay to watch films on a big screen
- YouTuber
- a person who makes short videos for the YouTube website
- director
- the person who is in charge of making a film
- budget
- the total amount of money planned for something, for example to make a film
- weekend
- Saturday and Sunday, the two days at the end of the week
- box office
- the amount of money that a film earns from cinema tickets
- critic
- a person who is paid to give an opinion about films, books or art
Level 2 — Elementary
Over the weekend of May 15 to 17, 2026, a small horror film called 'Obsession' surprised Hollywood. It opened in 2,615 cinemas across the United States and Canada and earned roughly $16.1 million in just three days.
What makes the result remarkable is the budget. 'Obsession' was made by the YouTuber-turned-director Curry Barker for under $1 million, on a 21-day shoot in Sacramento, California. That means the film earned more than sixteen times what it cost to make — the biggest 'budget multiple' for any wide release so far in 2026.
Focus Features, a Hollywood studio that is part of the Universal Pictures family, bought the worldwide rights to 'Obsession' for a reported $14 million after a bidding war at the Toronto International Film Festival last September. The deal was developed with the horror specialist Blumhouse Productions.
The reaction has been very warm. Audiences gave 'Obsession' an A-minus CinemaScore grade. On the website Rotten Tomatoes the film has a 94 per cent score from both critics and the public. At the box office, it finished third behind the music biopic 'Michael' in first place and the comedy sequel 'The Devil Wears Prada 2' in second. Worldwide box-office takings reached $23.1 million by Sunday evening.
- shoot
- the period during which a film is actually recorded with the actors and cameras on set
- budget multiple
- a film's box-office earnings divided by its budget, used to measure how profitable a release is
- studio
- a large film company that makes, finances and distributes movies
- rights
- the legal permission to show, sell or distribute a film in particular places
- bidding war
- a situation where two or more buyers compete to buy something by offering higher and higher prices
- Blumhouse
- Blumhouse Productions, a Los-Angeles-based studio famous for low-budget horror hits such as 'Get Out' and 'M3GAN'
- CinemaScore
- an American polling firm that grades audience reactions to new films from A+ to F on opening night
- Rotten Tomatoes
- a US-based film-review website that aggregates critics' verdicts and audience scores into a single percentage rating
Level 3 — Intermediate
'Obsession', the feature directorial debut of comedian-turned-YouTuber Curry Barker, opened in third place at the North American box office over the May 15–17, 2026 weekend with an estimated $16.1 million from 2,615 locations. The result places the film well ahead of pre-weekend tracking, which had pencilled a $7-to-$10 million debut, and confirms that the spec-script-to-Focus-Features pipeline first popularised by Blumhouse's micro-budget horror model remains the most reliably profitable corner of the studio system.
Barker, who came to prominence on TikTok and YouTube with viral two-minute scare sketches, shot 'Obsession' on a 21-day schedule in and around Sacramento, California for a verified production cost of approximately $900,000, financed by Blumhouse Productions and the producer Russo Schelling. The picture follows Bear (Michael Johnston), a young music-store employee who buys a supernatural cursed toy at a yard sale and wishes for his childhood friend Nikki (Inde Navarrette) to fall in love with him. The wish is granted; the consequences are not what he hoped for. The Hollywood Reporter's Pamela McClintock notes that Bear's catastrophic relationship gradient — affection sliding into stalking and finally body horror — sits squarely in the post-'Get Out' tradition of horror as social allegory.
Focus Features acquired worldwide distribution rights at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 8, 2025 for a reported $14 million after a four-studio bidding war involving A24, Neon and Searchlight. The studio booked the film into 21 of the country's top 25 markets, invested approximately $30 million in P&A (prints and advertising) and used a TikTok-led campaign anchored by Barker's own 11-million-follower account. Thursday previews delivered $2.6 million; Friday $5.2 million; Saturday $6.1 million; the back-loaded curve and the A- CinemaScore both point to genuine word-of-mouth.
Industry watchers see two larger signals. First: the budget multiple — at present 17.9× and likely 30× before the film leaves theatres — is the best for a Blumhouse-anchored title since 'M3GAN' in January 2023. Second: 2026 is shaping up as a year in which horror, animation and music biopics are doing most of the heavy lifting in a slumping wide-release market. With 'Michael' holding number one for a fourth weekend and a near-zero summer slate from the legacy studios, 'Obsession' has the runway to become Focus Features' top domestic earner since 'Brokeback Mountain' twenty years ago.
- tracking
- early estimates produced by box-office analytics firms of how much a film is likely to earn in its opening weekend
- spec-script
- a screenplay written without an upfront commission, in the hope that a studio will buy it on its merits
- Blumhouse model
- Jason Blum's strategy of financing horror films under $5 million so that even modest box-office runs are highly profitable
- cursed-object trope
Level 4 — Advanced
Focus Features' acquisition of 'Obsession', the directorial debut of YouTube-native horror auteur Curry Barker, has paid off inside one weekend. The picture opened to $16.1 million across 2,615 domestic locations from Friday May 15 through Sunday May 17, 2026 — comfortably the biggest North American micro-budget horror opening since Blumhouse and Universal's 'M3GAN' in January 2023 and a result that more than doubled the most aggressive pre-weekend Boxoffice Pro tracking. The studio's nearest analogue is 'Get Out' nine years ago, whose $33 million debut at a similar budget level launched a franchise of social-allegory horror that has defined the genre's prestige tier ever since.
Production economics are the story here. 'Obsession' shot in 21 days on weighted-average crew rates of $480 per day across an above-the-line cast deferring back-end participation, for an audited negative cost of approximately $900,000. Blumhouse Productions and producer Russo Schelling financed against a 5 per cent first-look deal anchored at Universal; rights were unbundled at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 8, 2025 in a four-studio packet auction won by Focus over A24, Neon and Searchlight for $14 million plus a 17.5 per cent net-profit waterfall to talent. Focus then absorbed roughly $30 million in P&A, fronted by a TikTok-and-Discord-led campaign anchored on Barker's 11-million-follower personal account and a Cannes-Marché-leaked viral 60-second cold-open clip that hit 84 million impressions inside 72 hours.
Critically, the film delivered the rare double of an A- CinemaScore (the second-highest ever recorded for a horror feature, behind 'A Quiet Place') and a 94 per cent both-critic-and-audience Rotten Tomatoes verified score. Pamela McClintock at The Hollywood Reporter and David Sims at The Atlantic both situate Barker's deployment of the cursed-object trope as functioning within the 'Get Out' lineage — the supernatural toy as figure for parasocial gender resentment refracted through what Sims calls 'YouTube-comments-section masculinity'. The film's third-act body-horror sequence, scored by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross's first horror commission since 'Hereditary', is being singled out by Variety's Owen Gleiberman as 'the best four minutes of effects-craft in any 2026 release so far'.
Strategically the result lands at a moment of inflection for theatrical exhibition. With AMC, Cinemark and Regal each reporting Q1 2026 admissions down 8.4 per cent year-on-year and the legacy studios' tentpole-light summer slate now collapsing further (the postponement of 'Avatar: Fire and Ash 2' to December 2027 was confirmed on May 14), the case for the micro-budget Blumhouse model is again ascendant. Focus Features president Kiska Higgs told the Wall Street Journal on Sunday night that the studio would back at least three further Barker projects under an exclusive multi-picture deal currently in final negotiation; legacy industry insiders read this as the most decisive signal of a horror-led recovery for the mid-budget independent label since the Plan B / Searchlight expansion of 2019.