Taylor Swift’s return to cinemas is poised to lead the weekend as industry tracking points to a $35 million to $40 million domestic debut for Taylor Swift: The Official Release Party of a Showgirl, a music-event feature tied to the launch of her new album. The live-programmed package, distributed in theaters and positioned as a fan celebration with new video premieres and behind-the-scenes material, opens October 3 amid heavy presales and a dense week of media appearances.
The projection places the Swift title ahead of The Smashing Machine, the A24 drama starring Dwayne Johnson as MMA champion Mark Kerr, which most trackers peg in the high single digits to mid-teens for its first frame. Earlier long-range outlooks had floated a higher ceiling for the sports biopic, but recent handicapping suggests a more modest start as awareness and interest consolidate in the final days before release.
Presales have been a key signal for the Swift film. Ticketing data cited by box office analysts showed more than $15 million banked nearly two weeks out, supporting a corridor of roughly $30 million to $50 million depending on day-of walk-up and the extent of premium-large-format bookings. The event model mirrors Swift’s 2023 concert film strategy while adding album-launch exclusives, giving exhibitors a music-driven draw at a time when the October slate has multiple midrange titles vying for attention.
The release also benefits from a coordinated publicity push around the album The Life of a Showgirl, including late-night bookings and branded cinema “release party” screenings. Forecast notes from specialty trackers describe unusually strong intent among younger female demographics and repeat patrons, with AMC Theatres Distribution again listed as the releasing partner in materials reviewed by trade outlets. Rival studios will watch whether the Swift audience cannibalizes repeat business from holdovers or behaves as additive traffic, as occurred with her previous theatrical rollout.
For The Smashing Machine, expectations hinge on adult-audience turnout and awards-season positioning. Coverage in recent days has emphasized Johnson’s transformative role and the film’s potential to build legs even if opening-weekend numbers trail the Swift event, a dynamic consistent with A24’s history of longer-tail performers when reviews and word of mouth align.





















































