Domestic Total: 575.15K
Opening Weekend: 250.81K
Legs: 2.29
Overview: When a proposed pipeline creates hostilities between residents of a small town, a newly-arrived forest ranger must keep the peace after a snowstorm confines the townspeople to an old lodge. But when a mysterious creature begins terrorizing the group, their worst tendencies and prejudices rise to the surface, and it is up to the ranger to keep the residents alive, both from each other and the monster which plagues them.
| Name | Character |
|---|---|
| Sam Richardson | Finn Wheeler |
| Milana Vayntrub | Cecily Moore |
| George Basil | Marcus |
| Sarah Burns | Gwen |
| Michael Chernus | Pete Anderton |
| Catherine Curtin | Jeanine Sherman |
| Wayne Duvall | Sam Parker |
| Harvey Guillén | Joachim Wolfson |
| Rebecca Henderson | Dr. Ellis |
| Cheyenne Jackson | Devon Wolfson |
| Michaela Watkins | Trisha Anderton |
| Glenn Fleshler | Emerson |
| Patrick M. Walsh | Dave Sherman |
| Anni Krueger | Charlotte |
| Ritz | Cha-Chi |
Comps are similar or comparison movies that are used for analysis and marketing purposes. The way they are found is described in more detail in the paper. Comps always have release dates before the movie they are compared to.
| Title | Release Date | Budget |
|---|---|---|
| The Wolf of Snow Hollow | Oct 23, 2020 | $2M |
| Bloody Hell | Oct 8, 2020 | $0 |
| The Monster | Nov 11, 2016 | $3M |
| Murder in the Woods | Aug 14, 2017 | $0 |
| Green Room | Apr 15, 2016 | $5M |
| The Bad Batch | Jun 23, 2017 | $6M |
| The Recall | Jun 2, 2017 | $5M |
| The Lobster | Oct 15, 2015 | $4M |
Week 1: $357.82K
Week 2: $140.92K
Investor Share: $77.5K
Week 3+: $76.42K
Investor Share: $38.21K
$288.91K (33.44%)
Investor Share: $101.12K
Budget: $7M
P&A: $7M
Gross: $864.06K
Net: $431.52K
Costs: $13M
Profit: $-12.57M (Loss)
The profitability breakdown is based on Dan Murrell's YouTube videos (Dan Murrell is not affiliated with Reel Numbers). The breakdown only includes the theatrical release and does not account for any post-theatrical revenue streams such as streaming, home video, or merchandise sales. Additionally, the breakdown does not include any tax incentives, sponsorships, or product placement that may have occurred during production.