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President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump arrive for the premiere of her movie "Melania" at The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center For The Performing Arts, in Washington. (AP/PTI)(AP01_30_2026_000001A)
For a film that arrived wrapped in online mockery and political memes, Melania has managed an outcome few documentaries achieve: a strong theatrical debut.The Amazon-backed documentary centred on First Lady Melania Trump is projected to earn around $8 million in its opening weekend in the US and Canada, marking the strongest opening for a non-concert documentary in over a decade.
The figure is significantly higher than early projections and places the film well ahead of typical releases in the genre.The performance stands in sharp contrast to the film’s digital reception. On social media, Melania has been widely derided as a glossy vanity project, with critics dismissing it as stage-managed and self-promotional. Viral jokes and conspiracy-tinged commentary framed the film as emblematic of Trump-era excess.
Yet the theatre turnout tells a different story.Audience data indicates that the film has over-performed in rural and Republican-leaning regions, with states such as Florida, Texas and Arizona driving ticket sales. Nearly half of the opening weekend audience reportedly came from smaller towns and non-urban markets, an unusually high share for a documentary.
The demographic profile has been equally distinctive. Viewers were overwhelmingly female and over the age of 55, with many screenings attracting organised groups from conservative and senior citizen communities.
For much of this audience, the film appears to function less as a cinematic event and more as a cultural affirmation.That divide between online commentary and offline consumption has defined Melania’s release. While critics and commentators debated its intent and tone, ticket buyers showed up with clear expectations and, in many cases, left satisfied. Exit surveys reflected strong audience approval, even as professional reviews remained largely sceptical.The scale of Amazon’s investment ensures that the box office numbers, though impressive for a documentary, come with qualifications. The company is reported to have spent tens of millions acquiring and marketing the film, making it one of the most expensive documentaries ever produced. Theatrical revenues alone are unlikely to offset that outlay, placing greater emphasis on the film’s eventual performance on streaming.Critical reception has focused on the film’s polished presentation and limited introspection, with reviewers arguing that its tightly controlled narrative leaves little room for complexity. The choice of director has also drawn attention, given his long absence from filmmaking before this project.Yet none of that appears to have deterred its core audience. In several screenings, viewers described their ticket purchase as a statement, reflecting a broader pattern in American culture where media consumption has become a marker of political identity as much as entertainment preference.Historically, documentaries struggle to draw sustained theatrical crowds. Few cross even modest box office thresholds. Against that backdrop, Melania’s opening weekend stands out, regardless of how the film is judged critically.The broader takeaway is familiar. In a polarised media environment, online ridicule does not necessarily translate into commercial failure. Cultural products no longer require universal approval. They require an audience that feels invested enough to turn up.For Melania, that audience did.

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