Welcome to the all-new version of The Roundup with me, Jeff Stockton! It may look a little different, but you can expect the same level of studio-friendly, niticky-ness you have grown to know and love (hopefully).
Three films into Season 36 and already we’ve got one genuine blockbuster, two outright bombs, and enough overreaction material to keep me employed for another year. Let’s get into the biggest winners and losers of Round 1. Here's The Roundup....
BOBA FETT
If there was ever a proof-of-concept for what LRF can do with a legacy IP, Boba Fett is it.
For years now, Disney has treated the Star Wars universe like a franchise desperately trying to remember why people liked it in the first place. Bloated streaming shows, diminishing theatrical returns, and a general inability to decide whether nostalgia or reinvention should be driving the ship have left the brand creatively stranded. Then LRF hands the keys to James Wan and suddenly Boba Fett looks like an actual movie event again.
A $763 million worldwide haul and over $220 million in profit is the sort of result that doesn’t just justify the gamble — it announces that LRF’s Star Wars experiment deserves to be taken seriously. The biggest compliment I can give Boba Fett? It felt like somebody actually had a vision. Disney may want to take notes.
JASON MOMOA
At what point do we stop acting surprised and admit Jason Momoa has become one of the most bankable stars in LRF?
Seriously.
Tarzan was already a strong performer, but Boba Fett feels like the moment where this becomes a legitimate trend rather than a fluke. Momoa has somehow cracked the code of what modern action stardom actually looks like: charisma, physicality, and just enough personality to make larger-than-life characters feel approachable.
The irony is that Hollywood has spent years trying to force-feed audiences “the next big movie star” while Momoa has quietly become exactly that in LRF. Two major hits back-to-back changes perception quickly. Right now, if Jason Momoa headlines your movie, people seem willing to show up.
SEASON 36
You only get one chance to make a first impression, and Season 36 has gotten off to a strong start — aesthetically, at least.
The refreshed looks for LRF’s various editorial segments give the season a noticeably cleaner identity, and while visuals obviously don’t make or break a season, presentation matters. When everything feels more polished, the whole operation feels bigger.
More importantly, having a major hit right out of the gate helps calm nerves. A season always feels healthier when there’s an early tentpole giving people something to rally around. Now the question becomes whether Season 36 has enough depth behind Boba Fett to sustain momentum.
BOX OFFICE
Here’s the less fun reality: two bombs out of your first three films is not exactly the dream scenario.
Yes, Boba Fett hit big — huge, even — but one success doesn’t completely erase the sting of Three Rounds and Heartbeat both losing money. Early-season box office struggles have a way of snowballing into larger conversations about slate quality, audience interest, and whether the studio is programming the season correctly.
One blockbuster can cover a lot of sins financially, but creatively? You’d still prefer not to be batting .333.
HOLDEN ABBOTT
At a certain point, we have to stop saying “bad luck.”
I actually think Holden Abbott is talented. His early output suggests somebody who clearly knows how to write compelling material and has a distinct voice. But four straight bombs to begin an LRF career is the kind of streak that starts raising uncomfortable questions.
Fair or unfair, box office matters. You can only hear “underrated” so many times before executives begin wondering whether audiences simply aren’t interested. Abbott feels overdue for a breakthrough, because right now he’s dangerously close to becoming one of those writers critics respect far more than audiences support.
HEARTBEAT
I’m just going to ask it.
Are Paul Mescal and Carey Mulligan actually movie stars?
Because based on this result, I’m leaning no.
Now, before everyone starts yelling — this isn’t me questioning whether they’re talented. They absolutely are. Mulligan has delivered strong performances for years, and Mescal is one of the more acclaimed younger actors working today. But acclaim and star power are not the same thing.
A courtroom-medical thriller with respected actors, a recognizable premise, and Ralph Fiennes directing only manages $25 million worldwide? That’s rough. At some point, audiences have to actually buy tickets for “prestige casting” to mean anything commercially. Right now, Mescal and Mulligan feel much more like “critics’ favorites” than genuine box office draws.



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