Toy Story 5 rakes in $279m in year's best opening weekend
Disney’s Toy Story 5 romped to the best opening weekend of the year, raking in US$160 million ($279m) in North America, industry estimates showed today, a record for the much-loved Pixar franchise.
The sequel, which debuted over Father’s Day weekend in the region, features Woody the cowboy, Buzz Lightyear and their gang of toys fighting for survival against competition from technology, particularly a tablet.
“This is prime family moviegoing season and Toy Story is delivering,” industry analyst David A. Gross said.

The new sequel has achieved the biggest opening weekend of any Toy Story movie released. Photo / IMdb, Pixar/Pixar, © 2026 Disney/Pixar
Gross called it “another sensational opening for a Pixar series sequel”, noting Toy Story 5 had the best starting weekend for any film in the franchise, an estimated 37% higher than Toy Story 4.
That will likely make it the second-biggest animated movie opening of all time, behind Disney unit Pixar’s Incredibles 2, which made US$182.7m in June 2018, he said.
“Family moviegoing has been leading the industry since it came roaring back from the pandemic in 2023,” Gross said. “A lot of the genre’s success is coming from sequels, live-action remakes of animation pictures, and hybrid combinations.”
Toy Story 5, which returns with Tom Hanks, Tim Allen and Joan Cusack voicing key characters, opened on 4425 screens across the United States and Canada over the weekend, Exhibitor Relations’ estimates showed.
Runner-up in the weekend box office take was the Stephen Spielberg-directed sci-fi thriller Disclosure Day, which debuted the previous weekend.
With an ensemble cast led by Emily Blunt and Josh O’Connor, the action-packed Universal film follows an effort to reveal a decades-long cover-up of extraterrestrial visitations.
It brought in an estimated US$17m, lifting its total to US$78.2m, according to estimates.
In third place was Focus Features’ indie horror hit Obsession, which took in another US$14m in its sixth week out for a total domestic haul of US$215.8m , data showed.

Tom Hanks, Tim Allen and Joan Cusack all return to voice their characters in Toy Story 5. Photo / IMdb, Pixar/Pixar, © 2026 Disney/Pixar
A24’s horror film Backrooms remained in fourth place with US$7.3m, taking its domestic total to US$175m in its fourth week out.
Coming in fifth was Paramount’s Scary Movie, a reboot of the parody franchise, earning US$6.7m in its third week out.
Rounding out the top 10 were: Masters of the Universe (US$5.6m), Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu (US$3.9m), Leviticus (debuted at US$2.7m), The Death of Robin Hood (debuted US$2.6m) and Michael (US$2.2m).
- AFP
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