Top Box Office: Movies in Theaters Now
The 10 highest-grossing films in theaters, ranked by estimated domestic box office for the week of July 4, 2026. Every title on the chart is paired with its Celluloid Score — our composite critic-and-audience rating — so you can see at a glance which box-office hits are also worth your ticket.
The #1 movie at the box office right now is Minions & Monsters, directed by Pierre Coffin. It holds a 78% Celluloid Score — Recommended. The rest of this week's top 10 is ranked below.
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Minions & Monsters
The funniest Minions outing in years leans into old-school monster-movie pastiche instead of sequel fatigue, and its genuine affection for classic Hollywood filmmaking carries it past a plot that's really just an excuse for gags.
Recommended78%Celluloid Score Recommended -
Toy Story 5
Proving that old toys can learn new tricks while reckoning with an era of endless screen time, Toy Story 5 largely sidesteps franchise fatigue by reaffirming that children everywhere still got a friend in these lovable characters.
Recommended83%Celluloid Score Recommended -
Supergirl
Milly Alcock brings a swagger to Kara Zor-El that'd make Krypton proud in this otherwise familiar origin story, dawning a promising new hero in the DCU who's still waiting for an adventure that matches her vigor.
Recommended60%Celluloid Score Recommended -
Young Washington
William Franklyn-Miller makes a confident debut as the future first president, but Jon Erwin's Revolutionary War action-drama often favors patriotic spectacle over the nuance its subject deserves.
Recommended66%Celluloid Score Recommended -
Jackass: Best and Last
Critics largely agree this closing chapter leans into nostalgia without losing its stomach for pain, landing a scrappier, more sentimental note than 2022's franchise return even as some sketches feel over-familiar this deep into the series.
Recommended73%Celluloid Score Recommended -
Superman
Pulling off the heroic feat of fleshing out a dynamic new world while putting its champion's big, beating heart front and center, this Superman flies high as a Man of Tomorrow grounded in the here and now.
Recommended77%Celluloid Score Recommended -
Disclosure Day
Critics have called this Spielberg-directed thriller a tense, tightly controlled exercise that trusts its ensemble cast over spectacle, with general audiences slightly cooler on its slow-burn pacing than the reviews would suggest.
Recommended72%Celluloid Score Recommended -
The Invite
Critics have called this English-language remake of a Spanish stage-to-screen comedy a career-best showcase for its four leads, with particular praise for how deftly it pivots from farce to real emotional reckoning inside a single apartment.
Recommended82%Celluloid Score Recommended -
Lucky Strike
Reviewers have found this WWII survival thriller competently made but generic, praising Scott Eastwood's committed lead performance while faulting a familiar plot and an awkward framing device that undercuts the tension it works hard to build.
Not Recommended54%Celluloid Score Not Recommended -
Flies
Critics have embraced this quiet, black-and-white two-hander as a return to form for Eimbcke, praising its disarming emotional honesty and the understated lead performances even as a few note the slim, familiar premise keeps it from greatness.
Recommended74%Celluloid Score Recommended
How the Top Box Office chart works
This chart ranks films in current wide release by their estimated domestic gross for the week — the same commercial pecking order you'd see on a weekend box-office report. Rankings refresh weekly as new releases arrive and holdovers rise or fall.
Alongside each film's commercial rank we show its Celluloid Score, a single 0–100 rating we calculate by averaging five independent sources: aggregated critic reviews, audience ratings, Metascore, Letterboxd star ratings, and IMDb user scores. A high box-office rank tells you what's popular; the Celluloid Score tells you whether critics and audiences actually rate it. When the two diverge — a chart-topper with a middling score, or a modest earner that critics love — that gap is often the most useful signal of all.
Looking for something specific? Browse new in theaters, coming soon, or our highest-rated Editor's Picks.
Frequently asked questions
What is the number one movie at the box office right now?
As of July 4, 2026, the #1 movie at the box office is Minions & Monsters, directed by Pierre Coffin. It holds a 78% Celluloid Score — Recommended.
What movies are in theaters this week?
The top box-office films in theaters the week of July 4, 2026 are 1. Minions & Monsters (78%), 2. Toy Story 5 (83%), 3. Supergirl (60%), 4. Young Washington (66%), 5. Jackass: Best and Last (73%).
How is the Top Box Office chart ranked?
The Top Box Office chart ranks films currently in wide release by their estimated domestic gross for the week. Each entry also shows its Celluloid Score — our composite rating averaged from five sources (critic reviews, audience ratings, Metascore, Letterboxd, and IMDb) — so you can see both commercial performance and critical reception at a glance.