Something genuinely historic is happening at the multiplex this weekend, and it has almost nothing to do with traditional Hollywood. Three films from YouTube-originated directors are sitting inside the domestic top five simultaneously, a feat that would have sounded absurd even two years ago.
‘Backrooms’, ‘Obsession‘, and ‘The Amazing Digital Circus: The Final Act’ are not just doing well. They are reshaping the entire conversation around who gets to make movies and who shows up to watch them.
‘Backrooms’, directed by 20-year-old Kane Parsons, grossed a record-breaking 81.4 million dollars in North America and 118 million dollars worldwide in its opening weekend, shattering the record for the largest opening ever by a first-time director with an original film.
Parsons is now also the youngest director in A24 history, having built his entire audience on YouTube before ever setting foot on a professional film set.

Curry Barker, the 26-year-old filmmaker behind ‘Obsession’, took a similarly grassroots path, releasing his micro-budget found-footage film ‘Milk and Serial’ for free on YouTube in 2024 before Focus Features acquired ‘Obsession’ for around 15 million dollars out of the Toronto International Film Festival.
The film has since pulled off something almost unheard of in the industry, rising 10% in its second weekend after already jumping 39% in its first, making it the first film since ‘E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial’ in 1982 to see ticket sales increase across its second and third weekends outside of the holiday season, according to Focus.


Rounding out this extraordinary trio is ‘The Amazing Digital Circus: The Final Act’, which earned 7.8 million dollars on Thursday alone at over 2,200 Fathom locations, outearning both ‘Scary Movie’ and ‘Masters of the Universe’ during the preview frame. By the end of 2024, YouTube videos relating to the animated series had clocked a reported 25 billion views, and the show became one of the five most-watched Netflix titles worldwide in its first two weeks of availability.


According to Variety, James Wan, who co-produced ‘Backrooms’ through his production company Atomic Monster, has spoken about why these filmmakers connect so deeply with audiences, saying that Parsons’ lack of commercial cynicism means he is “strictly thinking about the authenticity of the film he’s making and what his fans are expecting,” which is exactly why those fans showed up in massive numbers.
Notably, both ‘Obsession’ and ‘Backrooms’ outperformed Disney’s latest Star Wars installment ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’ at the box office, signaling that audiences may be increasingly drawn to original stories over familiar franchise fare.
The numbers are telling studios something they can no longer afford to ignore. Gen Z has a short list of creators it trusts, and those creators are not necessarily the ones with the biggest studio budgets or the longest IMDb pages. They are the ones who built something real on the internet first.
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