Promotional film for Taylor Swift’s new album raises US$33 million and leads the US box office

“The official release party of a showgirl”, basically an 89-minute commercial for Taylor Swift’s new album, sold around US$33 million in tickets (the equivalent of R$176.1 million) in cinemas in the United States and Canada between last Friday (3) and this Sunday (5), according to Comscore, which compiles box office data. More of a set of “DVD extras” than a film, “The official release party” — which will arrive in Brazil on October 24th — was shown in 3,702 theaters in the land of Uncle Sam and easily topped the ranking.

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The audience for the “almost-film” was approximately 88% women and 70% white, according to PostTrak, a film industry research service. Critics didn’t rate “The official release party,” but Swift fans loved what they saw, giving it an A+ in CinemaScore polls. (Swift did not reveal how much it spent on the production, which grossed another US$13 million abroad.)

In third place was “Fighter’s Heart: The Smashing Machine”, a sports drama from A24 starring Dwayne Johnson — the former professional fighter known as The Rock —, which performed poorly. The film grossed about $6 million in wide release and cost $40 million to make, not counting marketing expenses.

A24 had been promoting “The Smashing Machine” for months, in part by aggressively positioning Johnson as a possible Oscar nominee. Reviews were positive, but audiences gave it a B- in CinemaScore polls.

'The life of a showgirl' is Taylor Swift's 12th studio album — Photo: Disclosure / Universal Music
‘The life of a showgirl’ is Taylor Swift’s 12th studio album — Photo: Disclosure / Universal Music

In a statement released this Sunday (5), A24 stated that the film, co-starring Emily Blunt and directed by Benny Safdie, “represents a creative achievement that will resonate far beyond its opening weekend.”

Swift’s cinematic move — she announced that “The Official Release Party” would only be shown for one weekend — was an unexpected victory for theater owners, many still trying to recover from the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. Multiplexes in the US and Canada had their worst summer since 1981, adjusted for inflation and excluding the pandemic years, when many theaters were closed for long periods.