Mission Impossible 7 Box Office : Takes $80 Million Domestic Opening, Almost Double In Overseas —

Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part 1 has achieved an impressive box office collection of $80 million during its extended weekend in the domestic market. This summer has witnessed peculiar trends for Hollywood movies, and even MI 7 couldn’t escape this phenomenon. Although the film’s performance surpasses its predecessor, the overall box office landscape has been unpredictable this season.
Fortunately, the movie has found solace in the international market, where it has performed exceptionally well. The overseas box office numbers are nearly double the North American figures, reaffirming the franchise’s immense popularity in global markets. Mission Impossible 7’s weekend collection stands at an impressive $235 million, indicating a successful run at the box office until the release of Barbie and Oppenheimer this Friday.
Here are the box office collections for Mission Impossible 7:
Domestic – $80 million
Overseas – $155 million
Worldwide – $235 million
The Tom Cruise starrer Mission Impossible 7 has a good opening at ticket windows across the globe. The domestic numbers are a little below expectations, but the overseas figures have covered it enough.
Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part 1 took its extended weekend to $80 million at the domestic box office. This summer has proved to be quite weird for Hollywood movies, and even MI 7 couldn’t break that myth. The numbers are better than the predecessor, but not up to par since the box office is behaving strangely this season.
The overseas numbers have provided relief for Tom Cruise’s action thriller. It’s almost double what the film scored in North America, proving again that this franchise is more popular in international markets. MI 7’s global weekend is at $235 million, indicating a good run until Barbie and Oppenheimer hit screens this Friday.
Below are the collections of Mission Impossible 7 :
Domestic – $80 million
Overseas – $155 million
Worldwide – $235 million