'Michael'

Source: Universal Pictures International

‘Michael’

UK-Ireland top five, April 24-26
 RankFilm (origin)  DistributorApr 24-26  Total Week
1  Michael (US)  Universal  £8.4m  £11.5m  1
 The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (US)
 Universal  £1.1m  £34.4m  4
 Project Hail Mary (US)  Sony  £834,109  £31.9m  6
 The Drama (US)  EFD  £503,310  £9.2m  4
 Lee Cronin’s The Mummy (US)  Warner Bros  £358,678  £1.8m  2

GBP to USD conversion rate: 1.36

Michael Jackson biopic Michael dominated the UK-Ireland box office chart on its opening weekend, with a strong £8.4m start.

The Universal title took a huge £12,039 average from 709 locations. Having opened on Wednesday, April 22, it is up to £11.5m already.

Any of its three individual days across the weekend would’ve been comfortably sufficient to top the weekend chart, with a £3.3m Saturday as the peak. It is an impressive opening performance in the context of warm weather across much of the weekend. The film’s top UK-Ireland site was the single screen at the BFI Imax in London.

The £8.4m three-day opening is the second biggest opening of the year, behind The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (£9.4m) earlier this month.

It is also the biggest opening ever for a music biopic, ahead of titles including Bohemian Rhapsody (£6.4m), Rocketman (£4m), Elvis (£4m), A Complete Unknown (£2.6m) and Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance With Somebody (£1.4m).

The film accounted for 68% of the total UK-Ireland box office this weekend.

It was a Universal one-two this weekend, with The Super Mario Galaxy Movie adding £1.1m to hit £34.4m from four sessions, with a 57% drop. It is 27% down on the £47.2m of 2023 predecessor The Super Mario Bros. Movie at the same stage, but is still the highest-grossing release of 2026 to date, and has passed the totals of The LEGO Movie (a lower £34.4m) and Mufasa: The Lion King (£33.5m).

Phil Lord and Chris Miller’s Project Hail Mary added £834,109 on its sixth weekend in cinemas – a 50% drop that brought it to £31.9m total, ahead of films including Slumdog Millionaire (£31.6m) and Gladiator (£31.3m). It is the highest-grossing Amazon MGM Studios title ever in the territory, with Sony handling distribution.

Kristoffer Borgli’s The Drama suffered the biggest drop of its four-week run to date, falling 58% for Entertainment Film Distributors, but still posted a decent £503,310. The wedding drama is up to £9.2m, and should cross the £10m mark in the next fortnight.

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy added £358,678 on its second weekend – a 63% drop that brought it to £1.8m total for Warner Bros.

Michael boosted takings for the top five up 54% on last weekend to 11.2m, with the figures also up a strong 38% on the equivalent weekend from last year. The top five titles have cumulatively topped £10m on three out of four weekends in April, in what seems to be a decent month for the box office. Disney’s The Devil Wears Prada 2 will be the main competitor to Michael’s second weekend, opening on Friday, May 1.

Titles still to report weekend box office figures include A24’s Mother Mary.

More to follow.