Obsession collected $8.2M on Saturday (Day 15), taking its US domestic total to $86.5M.

Obsession poster
The micro-budget horror continues to show remarkable momentum, delivering another strong weekend performance.
Day 15 Snapshot (Saturday)
Day 15 Add$8.2M
US Domestic Total$86.5M
Overseas Total$22.3M
Worldwide Gross$108.8M
Budget$1.0M
Budget Ratio86.55x

Performance Analysis

Obsession has added $8.2M on Day 15, registering a 69.4% jump from Friday and a 34.3% week-on-week growth. With a $1 million budget, the film has now achieved an extraordinary 86.55x ratio, making it one of the most profitable releases of the year by a significant margin.

The film has built its success through clever marketing, genuinely terrifying sequences, and powerful word-of-mouth. Michael Johnston’s lead performance and the focused direction have created an experience that keeps audiences engaged and eager to recommend it. The viral potential and strong social media discussions have continued to bring in new viewers even in Week 3.

This level of sustained performance from such a low budget is rare in Hollywood. Obsession has become a genuine breakout hit by prioritizing tension, atmosphere, and smart storytelling over expensive effects or major stars.

Overseas has added $22.3M so far, pushing the worldwide total past $108 million. The global response further proves the film’s wide appeal.

Technical strengths in sound design, lighting, and editing have maximized the horror impact within the limited resources. The supporting cast contributes effectively to building tension.

Audience response has been broad — horror fans, younger viewers, and general audiences seeking a strong theatrical thrill. The film continues to gain new supporters through recommendations.

In summary, Saturday’s $8.2M collection shows Obsession is maintaining remarkable continued momentum. It stands as one of the standout commercial successes of the year.

Reality check: At 86.55x budget ratio after 15 days with remarkable momentum, Obsession is an exceptional blockbuster for a micro-budget horror film.