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Obsessed with Obsession: how a low-budget horror changed the game in Hollywood

The $750,000 relationship horror about a cursed wish is set to outgross a new Star Wars movie, energizing Gen Z audiences and creating a rare cultural conversation T his week, the independently produced horror movie Obsession , which cost either $750,000 or $15m depending on whe

Obsessed with Obsession: how a low-budget horror changed the game in Hollywood
Guardian Film โ€” 12 June 2026
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The $750,000 relationship horror about a cursed wish is set to outgross a new Star Wars movie, energizing Gen Z audiences and creating a rare cultural conversation

T his week, the independently produced horror movie Obsession , which cost either $750,000 or $15m depending on whether you count its actual budget or acquisition cost for its studio, officially passed the latest Star Wars movie at the box office (the film has so far made over $165m in the US alone).

Itโ€™s not a coincidence that this happened on a weekday. Obsessionโ€™s box office power lies not just in its astonishing weekend-to-weekend strength (including the virtually unheard-of trajectory of increasing grosses on its second and third weekends) but in its powerhouse weekday grosses. This past week, as it approached the one-month mark in theaters, it was averaging over $4m on its weekdays. At the same point in the run of Avengers: Endgame, that movie โ€“ the biggest summer blockbuster of modern times โ€“ was pulling in half as much.

When all is said and done, Obsession will (probably) not make as much as Avengers: Endgame, though its return on investment is far more astronomical. But this intimate and occasionally gruesome horror movie about a meek twentysomething named Bear (Michael Johnston) who wishes for the devotion of his cool-girl crush Nikki (breakout performer Inde Navarrette) only to accidentally curse her with a form of unnerving possession, has the kind of cultural cachet needed to break through in a post-pandemic, post-superhero moviegoing landscape.

I saw this first-hand venturing out to see the movie a second time with a paying crowd on Thursday. Normally at a Times Square multiplex in Manhattan, the big Thursday-night draw would be a previewing blockbuster officially opening on Friday, like Steven Spielbergโ€™s new film Disclosure Day; for a movie thatโ€™s already been out for a week or more, Thursday is typically its lowest-grossing day of the week. But the 300-seat auditorium used for a 7.30pm showing of Obsession was nearly full, just as similar shows across the city had been all week.

As a critic, I first saw Obsession in a small screening room, and though its creepiness, shocks, and mordant laughs played fine to an audience of a dozen or so journalists โ€“ I gave it a positive pre-release notice โ€“ the full audience experience felt different. Waves of laughter and murmurs of discomfort crested through the crowd, and though the movieโ€™s particularly shadowy lighting made it difficult to see, I did catch plenty of viewers with their hands on their faces, aghast as Bearโ€™s wish (and his passivity) causes Nikki (or, more accurately, her puppeted body) to become increasingly unhinged. Multiple pairs, seemingly couples, covered each otherโ€™s eyes in affectionate mutual quasi-agony. When the movie reached its grim-but-fair conclusion and rolled its credits, chatter quickly rose, overtaking the usual quiet shuffling toward the exit.

Outside the auditorium, I spoke with a few groups about their decision to come out on a Thursday night, temporarily aligning them more with all-hours obsessives like me rather than the typical moviegoer who might attend one every few months, if that. Some of them were indeed cinephiles, including a young woman who had already seen the film and organized a group of uninitiated friends to come check it out. As such, the group framed the specific weeknight outing as more of a convenience, an offshoot of trying to find a time that worked for everyone. That itself seems telling about the force of the filmโ€™s buzz: this was enough of an event to coordinate the schedules of half a dozen presumably busy twentysomethings. Clearly this wasnโ€™t a normal occurrence; one of those friends hadnโ€™t seen a movie in theaters since last yearโ€™s A24 comedy Friendship.

So what motivated everyone to make this specific trip happen, uniting AMC A-listers with once-a-year types? Almost everyone cited buzz about the film, both from real-life friends and online discourse. One guy specifically pointed to news about the movie delaying its streaming premiere indefinitely creating the impetus to not just wait for home viewing. At the same time, other forms of home viewing seemed to goose interest, too, as others mentioned TikTok clips, specifically of a scene where Nikki reacts to Bear lightly pressing her on a personal question during a date with an escalating, panicked โ€œno, no, no, no, NO, NO, NOOOโ€ (in a scene that has reportedly led fans to swarm the real location to recreate).

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