Sydney Sweeney has responded to the weak opening of Christy, her biographical drama about champion boxer Christy Martin, saying the project’s value is measured in its subject’s story and the conversations it sparks. The film earned about $1.3 million in U.S. theaters over its first weekend despite a wide release, placing outside the top ten. In a post shared after the weekend, Sweeney wrote that artists “don’t always just make art for numbers,” calling the movie “the most impactful project of my life.” The Guardian reported that Christy opened in more than 2,000 locations and was produced for roughly $15 million.
Directed by David Michôd and co-starring Ben Foster, Merritt Wever, and Katy O’Brian, the film traces Martin’s rise in the 1990s and the domestic abuse she endured at the hands of her then husband and trainer. Sweeney’s statement emphasized the film’s relevance to survivors and framed its theatrical result as secondary to its message about resilience and safety. Trade coverage noted the remarks arrived amid a broader conversation about the market for adult dramas, which have struggled to break through theatrically this year.
Reactions to Christy have been mixed since its September festival bow, with some critics praising Sweeney’s physical transformation and others faulting the film’s familiar boxing-movie rhythms. The muted start also reignited online debate around the star’s recent visibility and branding, though analysts cautioned that the film’s genre and release slot likely played a larger role in turnout. As the distributor continues its rollout, the campaign has leaned on Sweeney’s advocacy, festival notices, and the true story’s built-in awareness from sports history.
Sweeney, whose recent slate spans romantic comedy and thriller, has positioned Christy as an example of the kinds of risks she wants to take while balancing commercial projects. Industry watchers said the performance underscores the gulf between social-media attention and opening-weekend conversion, a gap that studios and talent have tried to close with targeted screenings and community partnerships on films rooted in real-world issues. For now, the star’s message stresses that the film’s intent is to reach audiences who identify with Martin’s experience, even if the initial numbers are modest.















































