The first box office numbers are in for Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day, and they confirm what teen moviegoers warned about weeks ago when a survey dismissed the sci-fi film as “for Boomers,” and the tracking data backed them up.
Per Deadline, the alien thriller starring Emily Blunt, Colman Domingo, and Josh O’Connor took in roughly $12 million worldwide on its first day, a $6 million Wednesday haul from its initial wave of overseas markets plus an estimated $6 million from domestic previews that started at 2 p.m. Thursday.
The trade cautions that the domestic preview figure could shift by Friday morning.

Coming In Under Already-Modest Projections
Here’s the problem: Deadline‘s sources now peg the film at around $35 million domestic and $65 million-plus worldwide for the weekend.
BoxOfficePro had projected an opening domestic range of $40 million to $50 million, a range that was already considered light for a Steven Spielberg sci-fi event movie.
So Disclosure Day isn’t just opening soft; it’s tracking under projections that were soft to begin with. The underwhelming debut isn’t entirely a surprise as the tracking data had already signaled trouble weeks earlier, alongside news of a Japan release pushed back nearly four months.
The foreign opening is targeted at $30 million-plus across 73 markets, with China and Spain debuting Friday.
Deadline notes the film is outpacing Spielberg’s Ready Player One in many overseas territories (not adjusted for inflation), but that comparison comes with a giant asterisk: Ready Player One opened to $49 million offshore on its way to a $102.7 million worldwide debut.
In today’s dollars, that $49M turns into over $65M, and that $102.7M turns into over $137M. Ready Player One opened domestically in today’s dollars to over $55M, which is $20M more than Disclosure Day. Quite a difference.

The Tracking Told The Story: Interest Flat At Zero
We’ve been following the awareness and interest numbers on this one, and the final pre-release data (via Puck News via The Quorum) is damning.
Three days before release, awareness on Disclosure Day ticked up 3 points, but interest was flat at zero. No late surge, no breakout moment, nothing.
For context, the eight-week-out Quorum chart had Disclosure Day sitting at 32 awareness — opening day for a Spielberg movie — while Toy Story 5 sat at 77 and Spider-Man: Brand New Day at 68, nearly two months from release. Awareness is the marketing campaign’s job, and it never got there. Spoiling the alien reveals certainly didn’t push the needle.

$115M Budget, $300M Breakeven
The budget is said to be $115 million, via Variety, which puts breakeven reportedly around the $300 million mark once marketing is factored in.
A $65 million worldwide start makes that a steep climb, the film will need serious legs and strong holds in China and Spain to get there.
Reviews are also lukewarm, which won’t help. The film sits at 82% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes — though that’s down from its 89% debut, as we covered in our Disclosure Day reviews breakdown — which puts it above Spielberg’s War of the Worlds and A.I. (both 76%) but below Close Encounters (91%) and Minority Report (89%). No audience score is available yet.

The Teens Called It: “For Boomers”
The bigger story is the pattern, and it’s one we saw coming. Disclosure Day‘s soft start follows Masters of the Universe stumbling at the box office, The Mandalorian & Grogu coming in under expectations, and Mortal Kombat II‘s less-than-stellar opening.
Back in May, a Puck News survey of 200 teen moviegoers told us exactly how this demo sees the film: when asked about Masters of the Universe, one teen said, “I like the idea of it but it’s for Boomers” — and the report noted the same perception applied to Spielberg’s Disclosure Day. That survey also flagged Disclosure Day‘s interest as flat three weeks ago. It never moved.
Spielberg’s name means everything to audiences over 40 and increasingly little to the demo that actually drives opening weekends.
The teens told us why themselves: they find out about movies through social clips, friends, and influencers — “Nobody watches commercials anymore,” as one put it.
An 82% Certified Fresh score can’t fix a marketing campaign that never reached them. Friday’s actuals will tell us if the preview estimates hold, and the China and Spain debuts will determine whether that $300 million breakeven is even a conversation worth having.
