Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Monday, June 1, 2026
BOX OFFICE BREAKDOWN (SEASON 36 ROUND 2)
DIARY OF A WIMPY KID
Budget: $19,000,000
Total Box Office: $18,000,669
Total Profit: -$17,489,101
Despite recognizable source material and a comedic twist on the beloved franchise, Diary of a Wimpy Kid failed to connect with audiences and became one of the weaker commercial starts for a comedy in recent LRF history. The result continues an uneven financial track record for writer Alex Conn in the genre.
BOX OFFICE FACT
Alex Conn has now written 16 comedy films for the studio, but only five have turned a profit, with the most recent success coming from Slowly Dying back in Season 30.
GENRE RANKINGS
Comedy: #94
DONKEY KONG COUNTRYBudget: $120,000,000Total Box Office: $720,434,668Total Profit: $242,043,104
Nintendo’s momentum within LRF continued in dominant fashion as Donkey Kong Country became an instant event film and one of the studio’s strongest animated performers ever. While it fell short of Super Mario’s all-time record, the film comfortably solidified Nintendo adaptations as one of LRF’s safest commercial brands.
BOX OFFICE FACTDonkey Kong Country now ranks as the #2 highest-grossing animated film in LRF history, surpassing Season 33’s The Legend of Zelda ($471M) and trailing only Season 17’s Super Mario ($879M). All three are Nintendo adaptations.
GENRE RANKINGSAnimation: #2Adventure: #5Comedy: #5
PIROUETTEBudget: $25,000,000Total Box Office: $39,100,555Total Profit: -$4,332,122
A strong critical reception and awards potential ultimately failed to translate into financial success for Pirouette, which narrowly missed profitability despite respectable theatrical business for an adult drama. Even so, the loss stands out more because of the names involved than the severity of the underperformance.
BOX OFFICE FACTJimmy Ellis and John Malone have now co-written 14 films together, with Pirouette becoming only their third financial loser, joining Paki (-$31M, Season 26) and Blue Ridge (-$21M, Season 23).
GENRE RANKINGSDrama: #283
Season 36 Round 2 Total Box Office:
$777,535,892
Season 36 Round 2 Total Profit:
$220,221,881
Back-to-back monster rounds have immediately made Season 36 one of the strongest starts in studio history, with Donkey Kong Country accounting for nearly 93% of Round 2’s total worldwide gross.
Season 36 Total Box Office:
$1,601,000,660
Season 36 Total Profit:
$406,349,246
Through just two rounds, Season 36 has already crossed $1.6 billion worldwide, powered almost entirely by the one-two punch of Boba Fett and Donkey Kong Country.
DONKEY KONG COUNTRY
Season 36 Round 2 Total Box Office:
$777,535,892
Season 36 Round 2 Total Profit:
$220,221,881
Back-to-back monster rounds have immediately made Season 36 one of the strongest starts in studio history, with Donkey Kong Country accounting for nearly 93% of Round 2’s total worldwide gross.
Season 36 Total Box Office:
$1,601,000,660
Season 36 Total Profit:
$406,349,246
Through just two rounds, Season 36 has already crossed $1.6 billion worldwide, powered almost entirely by the one-two punch of Boba Fett and Donkey Kong Country.
SEASON 36 BOX OFFICE STANDINGS
- Boba Fett — $763,673,771 👑
- Donkey Kong Country — $720,434,668 👑
- Pirouette — $39,100,555 📉
- Three Rounds — $34,386,590 💣
- Heartbeat — $25,404,407 💣
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid — $18,000,669 💣
LRF TRIVIA TIDBITS (SEASON 36 ROUND 2)
Round 2 of Season 36 highlights the growing influence of cross-media franchises, performance-driven casting choices, and emerging multi-hyphenate talent stepping into larger creative roles. From expanding gaming universes to actor-director negotiations, each film reflects a different kind of behind-the-scenes leverage.
Donkey Kong Country
With Donkey Kong Country, LRF continues to build out its Nintendo-inspired slate, following the animated Super Mario film from Season 17 and Season 33’s The Legend of Zelda and Metroid. The project signals a clear long-term strategy to develop a shared ecosystem of game-based adaptations across both animation and live-action formats.
Pirouette
Authenticity was key in casting Pirouette, with Monica Barbaro and Emma Mackey both selected in part due to their real-life ballet training. Johnny Depp, meanwhile, signed on for a supporting role largely because of his prior working relationship with director Maiwenn, following their collaboration on Jeanne du Barry.
Diary of a Wimpy Kid
Finn Wolfhard leveraged his casting in a major way, agreeing to take the lead role only if he could also direct the film—while even cutting his acting fee in half to make it happen. The result is a rare case of a young actor using a studio adaptation to simultaneously establish himself as a filmmaker, particularly with the project’s unexpected R-rated, stoner-comedy twist.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Release: Pirouette
"Pirouette is an elegant, emotionally bruising backstage drama elevated by a terrific Monica Barbaro performance and Maïwenn’s immersive direction. Barbaro convincingly sells both the physical strain and emotional desperation of Lauren’s pursuit of greatness, while Johnny Depp gives quietly compelling work as the demanding, morally ambiguous Jean-Claude. The film occasionally leans into familiar “art demands sacrifice” territory, but its emotional honesty and richly observed ballet world keep it compelling. Emma Mackey is also wonderfully icy as Lauren’s rival." - Jon Farrell, Hollywood Reporter
"Pirouette is the kind of adult, actor-driven drama that Hollywood talks about making and rarely does. Maïwenn’s direction is intimate without being precious, and she understands how obsession curdles into self-mythology. Monica Barbaro gives a career-best performance, capturing both the physical rigor of ballet and the emotional tunnel vision that comes with chasing artistic validation at all costs. Johnny Depp, used sparingly and effectively, plays Jean-Claude Beaufort as a quietly corrosive presence — not a monster, but something more unsettling: a man who mistakes control for mentorship. The film’s final act is bracing in its refusal to offer easy catharsis. Pirouette doesn’t celebrate ambition so much as interrogate what it hollows out, and that restraint is what makes it linger." - Reggie Coscarelli, San Fernando Valley Sun


















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