Universal Pictures’ sixth dinosaur feature, “Jurassic World Rebirth,” charged into the holiday corridor with an estimated $137 million across the Wednesday–Sunday span, including $81 million for the traditional three-day weekend, according to studio estimates. The launch follows a mid-week opening that banked $30 million on Wednesday and another $25.3 million on Thursday, bringing receipts to $55.3 million before Friday even began.
Pre-release tracking had pointed to a $120–125 million five-day haul, while Universal’s internal projection was closer to $100 million. Early walk-up demand, buoyed by mystery-movie previews on Monday nights, lifted the picture beyond those targets.
Even with the strong start, Rebirth lands below the 2022 trilogy closer “Dominion” and well under the 2015 “Jurassic World” record, reinforcing analyst views that each sequel has earned a bit less than the one before. Forecasts from Box Office Theory suggest a domestic finish in the $700-800 million range if momentum holds, still lucrative but reflecting franchise fatigue.
The movie’s footprint skips IMAX screens, which are locked by Brad Pitt’s Formula 1 drama, steering premium-format crowds toward Dolby and 4DX auditoriums instead. Industry chatter suggests the lack of IMAX could trim grosses by a single-digit percentage, though Universal is already exploring a fall re-issue once the format clears.
Creative reins passed to director Gareth Edwards, who told multiple outlets he shot primarily on 35 mm to echo Steven Spielberg’s original texture. Screenwriter David Koepp said Spielberg’s notes stressed fresh scares and minimal self-reference: “Let’s make the science as close to real as we can.”
Critics remain split. Gazettely’s Arash Nahandian called it “a cinematic ghost, a perfect copy of a masterwork that captures the image but none of the soul”. Fans on Reddit praised set-piece clarity yet debated whether early screenings burned demand or fueled word-of-mouth.
For now, audiences appear willing to return to the island, even without the extra-height screens, giving Universal its second-largest domestic debut since “Oppenheimer.” You can read our review of the movie here.