Taylor Swift Triumphs, Dwayne Johnson’s ‘Smashing Machine’

Mega singer Taylor Swift proved again that she can rule the big screen, too.
Her newest theatrical effort, “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl,” is dancing to the top of box office charts with $33 million over the weekend.
The “cinematic experience,” as the project has been dubbed, collected another $13 million at the international box office for a global total of $46 million.
It’s a significant tally given that “Showgirl” was announced late and landed in theaters with minimal promotion outside of Swift’s social media feeds. AMC is distributing “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl,” which isn’t a traditional movie, or a concert film like Swift’s The Eras Tour, but a listening party that offers fans a look at a new music video and behind-the-scenes footage for her 12th studio album,.
“The Life of a Showgirl.” This is Swift’s second No. 1 box office debut after 2023’s “The Eras Tour,” which opened to a staggering $93.2 million.
Swift put tickets on sale for $12, which is above the national average price but below the cost in major cities like New York City or Los Angeles.
Audience reception has been stellar (a rare “A+” grade on CinemaScore exit polls), but no matter the feedback, “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl” is only slated for the weekend of Oct. 3 through 5. That means the Swift-induced box office bump will be brief.
This weekend’s other newcomer, Dwayne Johnson’s R-rated sports drama The Smashing Machine cratered in third place with $6 million from 3,345 venues.
Those ticket sales were way below projections and marked a career low for Johnson, below his 2010 thriller “Faster” ($8.5 million, not adjusted for inflation). Ignominious records aside, it’s a blow to A24, which spent $50 million to produce the movie — and many millions more on promotional efforts, including stops at Venice and Toronto Film Festival. Heading out of the Lido, “The Smashing Machine” was warmly greeted and considered an Oscar contender, but it’s unclear now if the disastrous commercial turnout will hurt the film’s awards chances.
Second place was DiCaprio’s comedic action epic “One Battle After Another” with $10.3 million from 3,634 theaters, declining 53% from its debut. So far, the film has earned $41 million in North America and $101.7 million globally. On one hand, it’s officially the highest-grossing film of director Paul Thomas Anderson’s career, overtaking 2007’s Western “There Will Be Blood” ($76.4 million globally). On the other, “One Battle” cost above $130 million to produce and doesn’t seem to have the staying power needed to justify its outsized budget. Since ticket sales are typically split 50-50 between studios and theater operators, “One Battle After Another” requires roughly $300 million to break even theatrically.
Also this weekend, Disney re-released “Avatar: The Way of Water,” which swam to $3.2 million from 2,140 domestic locations. The blockbuster epic added another $6.8 million overseas, bringing its weekend tally to $10 million. The studio brought director James Cameron’s sequel back to screens to stoke excitement for the third entry, “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” which opens in December. The original “Avatar” and its long delayed sequel “The Way of Water” each grossed over $2 billion globally and are two of the biggest movies in history.
Will “Fire and Ash” complete the trifecta?





