Explore the films at the UK box office and discover the top films of the weekend at the cinema. What’s holding the top spot this week?
Welcome to The Official UK Box Office Top 10. Here you’ll find the latest Box Office Top 10 and the biggest hits in cinemas right now.
This weekend at the UK box office, Supergirl stumbled into cinemas, crashing out just as hard as the heroine does in a bar under a red sun. Toy Story 5 held well, and some new openers altered the top ten. Read on to find out which films grossed the highest for 26-28 June.
(1) Toy Story 5
Holding at number one in its second weekend of release, Toy Story 5 pulled in £9,160,892, only falling 40% compared to its first weekend. This hold reflects the demand for family-animated films. Its hold is similar to that of Toy Story 4 back in 2019, as that film only fell 37.5% in its second weekend, demonstrating the franchise’s enduring hold on audiences.

(2) Supergirl
Supergirl only managed to open to £2,725,612, which is a bad start for the film. This is the second theatrical release in James Gunn’s rebooted DCU, following Superman, which opened around the same time last year. Superman opened to more than double what Supergirl did, with £6,992,902 in its opening weekend.
Supergirl isn’t the only female superhero to make her debut this decade, and unfortunately, the box office for her opening weekend is comparable to the rest of them. Birds Of Prey: And The Fantabulous Emancipation Of One Harley Quinn (which opened before worldwide lockdowns in February 2020), could only muster £2,833,297, Wonder Woman 1984 opened during the height of COVID in December 2020 so it is unfair to compare, The Marvels (released in November 2023) pulled in £3,465,783, and Madame Web (released in February 2024) opened to £2,273,544. In this context, Supergirl’s opening reads more as an audience rejection of films with female superheroes front and center, rather than a rejection of the DCU or superheroes, however fair or unfair that may be.

(3) Disclosure Day
Dropping 49% in its third weekend, Disclosure Day brings in another £881,544. The film has managed £10,784,867 to date, not a mind-blowing sum but not completely disappointing either.

(4) Jackass: Best and Last
The fifth Jackass film (not counting any spin-offs), Jackass: Best and Last, opened to £781,483, which is good enough for the number four spot. When compared to the previous entry in the franchise, Jackass Forever, opened to £2,091,017, back in 2022, so it’s fair to say that the love for this franchise has worn off, pointing at a good stopping point.

(5) Obsession
Still holding the box office in awe, Obsession pulls in another £584,816 in its seventh weekend of release. Its total gross to date of £16,519,964 has now eclipsed that of Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu, a surprising feat that speaks to both Obsession’s box office strength and the weakness of The Mandalorian and Grogu.

(6) Scary Movie
Scary Movie continues to fall quickly, dropping 60% in its fourth weekend of release and bringing in only £223,841. With the stiff competition coming in July, this film likely won’t have a run that lasts much longer.
(7) Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War – The Calamity
A compilation of the first three episodes of the fourth and final season, the Japanese anime film Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War – The Calamity opened to £210,660 in 119 cinemas. It follows Ichigo and his allies attempting to stop the collapse of reality after Yhwach breaches the Royal Palace and strikes down the Soul King
(8) Backrooms
Coming in at number eight, Backrooms managed to bring in another £196,330 in its fifth weekend of release, for a total so far of £12,303,194. After its phenomenal box-office hold, Backrooms is sliding down the top ten at the UK box office.

(9) Les Liaisons Dangereuses – NT Live 2026 (Theatre)
A global cinema broadcast of the National Theatre’s London stage production, Les Liaisons Dangereuses – NT Live 2026 (Theatre) made £162,940 in its second weekend of release. While technically an increase of 8814% over its first weekend, this is due to a large expansion of cinemas, from 1 to 270.
(10) Michael
Spending its last weekend in the top ten, Michael pulls in another £137,967 in its tenth weekend of release. The film has had an impressive box office run, with £52,754,198 to date.

Next weekend sees Minions & Monsters arrive in cinemas, providing some competition to Toy Story 5 in the animated family film space.
How many of these epic movies will you be watching in cinemas this weekend? Drop a comment in the chat below.
Data from Rentrak via the British Film Institute.


