A horror film shot for $750,000 by a 26-year-old YouTube filmmaker has become the highest-grossing festival acquisition in cinema history, dethroning a record held for 22 years by Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11.
Obsession has earned $225.5 million globally, surpassing the $222 million worldwide gross that Moore’s 2004 political documentary had held as the benchmark for festival-acquired films. The film also became Focus Features’ highest-grossing release ever, overtaking Downton Abbey, which collected $194.6 million worldwide in 2019.
Focus Features secured the rights out of the Toronto Film Festival after a roughly 24-hour bidding war against competitors including A24 and Neon, paying around $15 million. The New Yorker reported it was the highest price ever paid for a genre film in TIFF history. At the time, no one in the industry predicted what would follow.
Writer-director Curry Barker, 26, is a former YouTuber whose second feature distills the ambient gender-based resentment of 2020s internet culture into a pulp horror morality tale. The film centers on Bear, played by Michael Johnston, a music store employee who breaks a supernatural “One Wish Willow” toy to make his longtime crush Nikki, played by Inde Navarrette, fall in love with him — and gets exactly what he wished for, at a horrifying cost. Barker has described the film as “a pretty tragic story about a man and a woman,” one in which Nikki is both villain and victim — a duality he says was central to the project.
Navarrette delivers what critics have called a star-making performance, while the film’s two most shocking moments have become the subject of sustained word-of-mouth buzz. That organic momentum produced one of the most unusual theatrical runs in recent memory — the film earned more in its second and third weekends than its opening weekend, a feat not seen since E.T.: The Extraterrestrial in 1982. In its fourth weekend alone, Obsession dropped just 7 percent with $25.6 million — a record hold for a horror film at that stage of its run.
The film carries a 95% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and stands as the highest-grossing original horror film of 2026, a distinction that has drawn attention in an industry increasingly dependent on sequels and existing IP. Barker has two studio projects already lined up: Blumhouse’s Anything but Ghosts and A24’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre.




















































