“Bottoms, which stars Rachel Sennott and “The Bear” breakout Ayo Edebiri, debuted at SXSW earlier this year to rave reviews from critics. You can read /Film’s review from the festival right here. The comedy centers on two girls, PJ and Josie, who start a fight club as a way to lose their virginities to cheerleaders. The club quickly gains traction, with the popular girls and the not-so-popular girls beating each other up in the name of self-defense. The film carries an $11.3 million production budget, which is relatively small, easing the burden of how much it needs to make back at the box office to become profitable.
It’s been a tough stretch for comedy at the box office since the pandemic began, with only “The Lost City” and “Ticket to Paradise” truly breaking out as romantic comedy theatrical hits. Jennifer Lawrence’s “No Hard Feelings” ($86.6 million) got close, but its $45 million budget looms large. The misses have far outweighed the hits. However, the early turnout for this movie has been encouraging, and we’ve seen these slow-build, platform releases work well recently for other studios.
Wes Anderson’s “Asteroid City” had a stupefyingly great $853,382 debut in just six theaters earlier this year, before giving the filmmaker the best single weekend of his career. That film is now a few nickels shy of crossing the $50 million mark globally. If “Bottoms”, another out-of-the-box R-rated comedy, can similarly find its footing with general moviegoers in the coming weeks, it could be a win for original cinema and a great start to the fall moviegoing season. Here’s hoping.
“Bottoms” is in select theaters now and expands wide on September 1, 2023.