Disney’s live-action “Lilo & Stitch” is on pace to deliver a record-setting Memorial Day launch, reaching an estimated $175-180 million over the four-day frame after a $55 million domestic opening day that drove its worldwide haul to $111 million by Friday night. Industry analysts say the blue alien’s return could top the $160.5 million holiday benchmark set by “Top Gun: Maverick” three years ago, signalling fresh strength for the studio’s remake slate after the soft start of “Snow White” earlier this spring.
Paramount’s “Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning” trails but still posts franchise-best figures. The Tom Cruise adventure drew $24.8 million on Friday and is projected to land around $77-78 million domestically for the long weekend, edging past the $61 million debut of 2018’s “Fallout”. Overseas momentum remains key: trade trackers put the film on course for roughly $200 million worldwide by Monday, aided by early releases in Korea, Australia and India before North America bowed. With a reported production cost north of $400 million, strong legs abroad will be vital to profit prospects.
By contrast, “Lilo & Stitch” arrives with a leaner $100 million budget and the backing of multigenerational fandom. PostTrak surveys cited by Deadline show 90 percent positive scores and an 81 percent “definite recommend,” suggesting robust word-of-mouth for family audiences heading into summer break. The picture also benefits from premium formats: Imax and PLF screens account for 22 percent of ticket revenue so far, according to studio estimates.
The holiday-weekend duel mirrors a 2002 showdown when the original animated “Lilo & Stitch” opened opposite Cruise’s “Minority Report” and narrowly lost; two decades later the roles reverse, underscoring rising demand for comfort viewing while adult-skewing tentpoles rely on overseas play and extended theatrical windows. Exhibitors welcome the one-two punch: domestic ticket sales for the frame are tracking 36 percent above the same period last year, providing a lift after a spring slump driven by strike-delayed releases.