What's Inside?
- Sydney Sweeney achieves career-best box office success as The Housemaid earns $383 million globally after strong audience word of mouth.
- The thriller marks a major comeback following earlier film disappointments and public controversy that challenged Sweeney’s rising Hollywood momentum.
- Lionsgate confirms sequel plans, cementing Sweeney’s bankability and strengthening her position among Hollywood’s most reliable leading stars today.
Sydney Sweeney’s rise in Hollywood has been fast, but her latest milestone feels different. It is not just another hit. It is a statement. After a year filled with mixed results and intense scrutiny, the 27-year-old actor has delivered the biggest box office success of her career with The Housemaid. The Lionsgate thriller has surged to an estimated $383 million globally after nearly two months in theaters, setting a new personal benchmark. For Sweeney, who built her fame through television and carefully chosen film roles, this moment marks both a professional high and a personal reset.
Sydney Sweeney sets new box office peak with The Housemaid

The numbers tell a powerful story. With its current total, The Housemaid has overtaken Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, which earned over $377 million during its original run. That earlier film, directed by Quentin Tarantino, later reached $393 million after a re-release. Still, the distinction matters. This is the first time a film led by Sydney Sweeney herself sits at the top of her box office résumé.
Her role this time was not a brief supporting turn. She carried the story as Millie Calloway, a housemaid pulled into a web of secrets inside an affluent home. Audiences responded. Reviews praised the film’s tension, its nostalgic nod to classic thrillers, and its unpredictable twists. The 74% critics score was solid, but the audience response stood out even more, with a strong 92% approval rating.
The film’s momentum proved steady. Even while opening against heavyweight competition like Avatar: Fire and Ash, it held its ground. Word of mouth did the rest. A modest second-week drop signaled that viewers were not just curious. They were invested.
Sydney Sweeney turns career setbacks into a defining comeback

The success did not come in isolation. Earlier in the year, Sydney Sweeney faced a string of disappointments. Films like Christy, Americana, and Eden struggled in theaters, while Echo Valley moved straight to Apple TV. At the same time, she found herself caught in controversy tied to her American Eagle campaign. Addressing the backlash, she said, “I don’t support the views some people chose to connect to the campaign. Many have assigned motives and labels to me that just aren’t true.”
Through it all, her work remained her anchor. The Housemaid, made on a modest $35 million budget, did more than recover its costs. It restored confidence in her box office draw.
Now, the future looks busy again. A sequel based on The Housemaid’s Secret is already in development, with director Paul Feig set to return. Sweeney will also reprise Cassie in Euphoria when it premieres on HBO Max in April 2026. New film projects, including Netflix’s live-action Gundam, are on the horizon.
For now, though, this moment belongs to The Housemaid. After a turbulent stretch, Sydney Sweeney has reminded Hollywood of something important. She is not just a rising star. She is a proven one.









