Box Office Snapshot: 'Regretting You' Edges Out 'Black Phone 2' at North American Box Office
Amanda Hirsch, Allison Williams, Dave Franco, Mason Thames, and Josh Boone speak onstage during Colleen Hoover's "Regretting You" A Night of No Regrets Opening Night Fan Event at AMC Lincoln Square 13 on October 23, 2025, in New York, New York. ©Bryan BEDDER / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / GETTY IMAGES VIA AFP

Paramount’s latest adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s novel, Regretting You, claimed the top spot at the North American box office this past Halloween weekend, signaling modest returns in a quiet cinematic period. Directed by Josh Boone, the romantic drama explores the complex bond between a mother and her teenage daughter in the wake of personal tragedy. Despite its second-week release, the film narrowly outpaced Universal’s horror sequel Black Phone 2, highlighting a weekend of cautious audience turnout across genres.

Paramount's Regretting You, the latest film adaptation of a Colleen Hoover novel, finished first place in a lackluster Halloween weekend at the North American box office, industry estimates showed Sunday.

Directed by Josh Boone, the romantic drama tells the story of a mother (Allison Williams) and teenage daughter (McKenna Grace) navigating life and love after tragedy strikes.

The film took in $8.1 million in its second week out, according to industry watcher Exhibitors Relations, narrowly beating Universal's horror sequel Black Phone 2, which earned $8.0 million.

The thriller sees Ethan Hawke's devilish villain return to terrorize a group of youths, this time at a camp.

Last week's first-place finisher, the Japanese anime feature Chainsaw Man -The Movie: Reze Arc, dropped to third place with $6.0 million.

It tells the dark fantasy story of orphaned teenager Denji, who is killed by the yakuza but reborn by merging with his pet devil to become Chainsaw Man.

In fourth place at $4.8 million was Bugonia, Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos's latest collaboration with Oscar winner Emma Stone.

The apocalyptic satire, which debuted at the Venice Film Festival, follows the abduction of a high-profile CEO (Stone) by two conspiracy theorists who believe she is an alien.

Fifth place went to Back to the Future, re-released for the film's 40th anniversary.

The top 12 films took in $44.8 million for the weekend, according to Exhibitor Relations, a 32 percent drop from the same period the previous year.

Rounding out the top 10 were

Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere ($3.8 million)

Tron: Ares ($2.8 million)

Stitch Ahead ($2.1 million)

Good Fortune ($1.5 million)

One Battle After Another ($1.2 million)

With AFP

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