The Barbie film
has become the US and Canada's biggest film of the year so far, said
distributor Warner Bros.
An estimated $155m
(£120m) was made in its opening weekend, the company said.
Meanwhile, new
release Oppenheimer - also out on Friday - made $93.7m (£72m) in the US, said
Universal Pictures.
The features come
at a time when cinemas in general are struggling as they lose out to
competition from streaming.
Meanwhile, in the UK, Vue said both films had led to the cinema chain
seeing its busiest weekend in four years.
Vue, which has 91 cinemas throughout the UK and Ireland, said it saw its
biggest weekend in four years and second biggest weekend in history by
admissions, with director Greta Gerwig's Barbie on track to become the biggest
film of 2023, ahead of Super Mario Bros.
The two films brought in half a million people to Vue screens, with
4,000 sold out viewings across the UK and Ireland, the company said.
Vue added that its most popular sites for Barbie sellouts include
Cambridge, Glasgow St Enoch, Leeds Kirkstall, Bolton, Islington in London.
Oppenheimer's plot is centred on the development of the first atomic
bomb, starring Cillian Murphy and directed by Christopher Nolan.
Meanwhile, Barbie tells a coming-of-age story of the children's
character where she explores her identity and encourages friend Ken to
establish individuality.
The two films were both released on Friday and the competition between
them both was referred to on social media as "Barbenheimer".
The opening weekend for Barbie, starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling,
has seen its ticket sales overtake that for the opening weekend of blockbuster
Super Mario Bros, making Barbie the biggest film of 2023 so far.
Worldwide, Barbie's debut took in $337m (£293m).
On Twitter, one user said that it had been years since she had
felt like going to the theatres to re-watch a movie, but Barbie had achieved
that for her. She said it would "remain a timeless masterpiece over the
years - ideas really are forever".
Before the films' release, Odeon in the UK said more than 200,000
advance tickets had been bought and some 10,000 filmgoers were expected to see
both the Barbie and Oppenheimer films during the opening weekend.
Meanwhile, Vue cinema in the UK reported on Friday that Barbie's
pre-sale purchases were "higher than any other blockbuster released this
year". Admissions on Friday were the highest for any Friday since the pandemic
- and the chain's third biggest Friday ever.
Universal Pictures said Oppenheimer had made £8.05m in the UK and
Ireland since Friday.
It added that Oppenheimer was forecast to have a better opening three
days than Christopher Nolan's other blockbusters - space-themed Interstellar,
war thriller Dunkirk and sci-fi hit Inception.
Earlier in July, stars left the premiere of Oppenheimer early because
of strike action over grievances including the encroachment of artificial
intelligence in the making and writing of Hollywood films.
The film made $93.7m (£75m) in international markets, bringing its
global total to $174.2m (£135m), Universal Pictures said.