LOS ANGELES — Emerald Fennell’s provocative reinterpretation of Emily Brontë’s literary classic, ‘Wuthering Heights,’ dominated the North American box office during the extended Presidents’ Day and Valentine’s Day holiday frame. Industry estimates confirmed the period romance, featuring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as the tragic lovers Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, secured a commanding $40 million debut. The film’s success has been significantly driven by strong turnout from female audiences, with its original soundtrack by pop artist Charli XCX adding contemporary appeal to the timeless narrative.
Analyst David A. Gross of Franchise Entertainment Research hailed the opening as exceptional for the romance genre, noting it quadrupled the sector’s typical performance benchmarks. ‘The potent combination of canonical source material, aesthetically compelling casting, and Fennell’s audacious directorial vision has clearly resonated with viewers,’ Gross stated.
Claiming the weekend’s runner-up position was Sony’s animated family feature ‘GOAT,’ which garnered $32 million. Produced by NBA icon Stephen Curry, the film centers on an undersized goat aspiring to compete in a basketball-inspired sport called ‘roarball.’ The voice cast includes Curry, Caleb McLaughlin, David Harbour, Gabrielle Union, and musician Jelly Roll. Gross characterized this debut as ‘excellent’ for a standalone animated release, surpassing industry averages for the category.
Third place belonged to Amazon MGM’s crime thriller ‘Crime 101,’ starring Chris Hemsworth, Halle Berry, and Mark Ruffalo, which collected $17.8 million according to Exhibitor Relations. The top five was completed by two other newcomers: 20th Century’s survival horror ‘Send Help’ ($10.7 million), featuring Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien as plane crash survivors on a deserted island, and Angel Studios’ romantic comedy ‘Solo Mio’ ($7.5 million), starring Kevin James as a jilted groom in Italy.
Established franchises and earlier releases populated the lower half of the top ten, including ‘Zootopia 2’ ($5 million), ‘Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die’ ($4.1 million), ‘Iron Lung’ ($3.9 million), ‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ ($3.8 million), and ‘Dracula’ ($3.3 million), demonstrating a diverse and competitive theatrical marketplace.
