Disclosure Day opened with $19.0M in the US on its first day, taking its domestic total to $19.0M and worldwide gross to $19.1M.

Disclosure Day poster
Steven Spielberg’s new film registers a solid opening despite mixed early reviews.
Day 1 Snapshot
Day 1 Add (US Domestic)$19.0M
US Domestic Total$19.0M
Worldwide Gross$19.1M
Budget$115.0M
US Domestic$19.0M

Disclosure Day delivered a respectable opening of $19M, which is a decent start for a mid-budget original film in the current market. While it didn’t reach blockbuster territory on opening day, the number is solid considering the film’s $115M budget and the competitive summer landscape.

Emily Blunt’s star power and Steven Spielberg’s name helped drive interest, though early reviews have been mixed. The film appears to have benefited from strong family and adult audiences on the first day. The opening suggests that audiences are still willing to turn out for original mid-budget films when they carry strong talent and a recognizable director.

Market-wise, the film performed well across both urban and suburban markets. The opening is competitive enough to give it a fighting chance at profitability, especially if it holds decently in Week 2.

With a current 0.17x ratio, the film is in early DISASTER territory on paper, but a $19M opening is respectable and gives it room to grow over the weekend.

Reality check: $19M opening is solid for a mid-budget original film. The movie has a realistic path to profitability if it holds well over the coming weeks.