‘Garfield’ Claims Victory Over ‘Furiosa’ With Worst No. 1 Memorial Day Opening in Three Decades
Overall revenue for the four-day holiday hits a 29-year low and is down steep 36 percent from last year.

Sony’s The Garfield Movie is claiming victory ahead of George Miller‘s Furiosa with an estimated four-holiday gross of $31.9 million.
It is the worst Memorial Day No. 1 opener since Casper debuted to $22.5 million nearly 30 years ago in 1995 (and that’s not adjusted for inflation). This stat excludes 2020, when theaters were closed during the pandemic.
Furiosa made more than Garfield for the three-weekend with estimated $25.6 million versus $24.8 million, but the four day number is the key stat.
Rival studios either show Furiosa slightly ahead for the four days, or have the two movies tied. Warners has taken the position of not reporting a four-day estimate until Monday.
With no holdovers to contribute to the Memorial Day picnic, overall revenue for the four days plummeted to estimated $127 million to $130 million, also a 29-year low. That excludes 2020 and 2021, when the pandemic was still raging, though Paramount’s A Quiet Place sequel was able to open to $57.1 million over in 2021.
But instead is the latest summer event picture to underperform in its launch (an exception is The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes).
Mad Max: Fury Road started of with a three-day gross of $45.4 million.
Miller’s film cost 168 million to make before marketing. Garfield — voiced by Chris Pratt and financed entirely by Alcon — cost more modest $60 million and opened in line with expectations.
Angel Studios continues to try to emulate the stunning success of last summer’s Sound of Freedom, but so far hasn’t come close to doing so. This weekend, it is opening the faith-adjacent film Sight, which may only gross $3.5 million from 2,100 cinemas for the four days for a seventh-place finish.
The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, playing in 3,550 theaters, placed No. 4 in its third outing as it nears the $300 million mark globally. The 20th Century/Disney tentpole reported an estimated four-day gross of $17.1 million for a domestic total of $126.5 million and at least $298.5 million globally through Monday.
The box office continues to suffer from marquee titles being pushed back because of last year’s labor strikes.
Marvel Studios usually kicks off summer over the first weekend in May with a superhero tentpole, and this year it was going to be Deadpool & Wolverine. Marvel and Disney, however, had to push the film — which had to halt production because of last year’s SAG-AFTRA strike — back by nearly three months to a planned July 26 release date.
Babes
A24’s I Saw the TV Glow placed No. 13 as it expanded into 458 theater, earning a so-so $642,000 for the four days for domestic cume of $2.8 million.





