
Box office records refer to the highest achievements in ticket sales for movies, typically measured by revenue or number of tickets sold during theatrical releases. These records highlight films that have earned the most money domestically or worldwide, often setting new milestones for opening weekends, single-day earnings, or overall gross. Box office records are used to gauge a film's commercial success, popularity, and cultural impact within the film industry.

Box office records refer to the highest achievements in ticket sales for movies, typically measured by revenue or number of tickets sold during theatrical releases. These records highlight films that have earned the most money domestically or worldwide, often setting new milestones for opening weekends, single-day earnings, or overall gross. Box office records are used to gauge a film's commercial success, popularity, and cultural impact within the film industry.
What is a box office record?
A box office record is the highest revenue earned or tickets sold by a movie during its theatrical run, in a specific market or worldwide.
What is the difference between domestic and worldwide box office records?
Domestic records track a film's performance in a single country (often the US and Canada); worldwide records include all markets across the globe.
What does opening weekend mean in box office terms?
Opening weekend is the first Friday–Sunday after a film's release; records here reflect the strongest initial demand.
How are box office records measured and compared?
Records are typically measured by gross revenue or tickets sold, and comparisons may use inflation-adjusted figures or specify the market and period (e.g., opening weekend, total run).