The company behind ‘Get Out’ and ‘Split’ dominates the weekend box office with its new horror movie (CMCSA)

The company behind ‘Get Out’ and ‘Split’ dominates the weekend box office with its new horror movie (CMCSA)
The company behind ‘Get Out’ and ‘Split’ dominates the weekend box office with its new horror movie (CMCSA)

The company behind ‘Get Out’ and ‘Split’ dominates the weekend box office with its new horror movie (CMCSA)

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Happy Death Day 2 UniversalUniversal

Jason Blum’s Blumhouse Productions has teamed up with Universal to shake up the box office once again.

After having two of the biggest box office hits of early 2017 with M. Night Shyamalan’s "Split" and Jordan Peele’s "Get Out," Blumhouse has resurfaced from the fog of the summer movie season with another box office hit, "Happy Death Day."

Mixing the company’s patented low-budget scary movie model with the classic plot of "Groundhog Day," the movie dominated the competition, which included Warner Bros.’s big-budget "Blade Runner 2049," to win the domestic weekend box office with an estimated $26.5 million, according to Variety.

The unique $4.8 million-budgeted scary movie, which follows a college student as she constantly relives the day of her murder until she can figure out the person behind it, was perfectly placed in the release schedule as the movie had little competition among other new releases this weekend and capitalized on the poor opening of the $150-million "Blade Runner 2049" had last weekend.

"2049" took in $15.1 million over the weekend on more than 4,000 screens ("Happy Death Day" was released on 3,149), which cements its future as being a high-priced cult classic like the original, as the movie hasn’t even made $100 million domestically yet (at $60 million). But the weekend also showed once again that outside of some blue-chip IPs, most audiences want to spend their money on non-sequels these days.

splitBlumhouse ProductionsBlumhouse proved that earlier this year as it surprised Hollywood with monster earners. "Split," made for $9 million and opening with $40 million domestically in January, went on to earn $278.3 million worldwide. A month later, "Get Out," made for $4.5 million and opening with $33.3 million, earned $253.1 million worldwide.

We’ll keep an eye on "Happy Death Day" to see if it continues to build steam as we get closer to Halloween (the next major release is Marvel/Disney’s "Thor: Ragnarok" on November 2), but it’s getting to a point now where other studios and distributors will think twice before going up against a Blumhouse release.

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