The headline from the March 14-16, 2026 weekend was that Reminders of Him opened to $19 million, beat projections, and finished second to Hoppers. The real story is that book-adaptation romance is still following the same release and audience playbook: a built-in reader base, a female-skewing opening, and a formula the industry has not meaningfully changed.
The Numbers Look New; the Pattern Does Not
Deadline reported that Reminders of Him, the third Colleen Hoover adaptation to hit theaters after It Ends With Us and Regretting You, earned $19 million domestically in its opening weekend, with $8 million on Friday alone. The film had been projected at $10 million to $15 million; it overperformed. Universal released it in about 3,400 theaters. Eighty-one percent of the audience was female, with 57% women over 25 and 25% women under 25. Thirty-two percent of ticket buyers said they came because it was a Hoover movie; 30% cited the romance-drama genre. The film received a B CinemaScore and 66% “definite recommend” on PostTrak. As Variety noted, it led the Friday box office among new releases.
That profile is familiar. It Ends With Us had already shown the ceiling for Hoover adaptations, with $351.4 million domestic; Regretting You had opened to a strong debut and reached $48.8 million domestic. The Ringer and other analysts have described the romance adaptation formula: recognizable tropes, emotional conflict, chemistry-driven casting, and a core audience that shows up opening weekend. Reminders of Him had a $25 million production budget, a PG-13 rating, and a second-chance romance plot. The Conversation has argued that successful book-to-screen romance depends on respecting the genre rather than condescending to it; the industry response has been to keep greenlighting the same type of project and the same release strategy.
Screen Rant called the opening a “record-breaking” romance performance in the context of Oscars competition; Hoppers took $30 million in its second weekend while the A24 horror film Undertone opened to about $10 million. The romance pipeline did not reinvent itself. It delivered another Hoover adaptation to the same demographic with the same playbook: wide release, strong first weekend, female-driven audience. The industry has not meaningfully changed the formula.
What This Actually Means
Reminders of Him’s box office is a win for the film and for Universal. It is also proof that the romance pipeline is still run by the same playbook. Until studios change how they develop, release, and market these adaptations, the pattern will hold: one or two breakouts and a steady stream of the same formula.
What Is Reminders of Him?
Reminders of Him is a 2026 American romantic drama directed by Vanessa Caswill, from a screenplay by Colleen Hoover and Lauren Levine, based on Hoover’s 2022 novel. It stars Maika Monroe as Kenna, a woman who returns to her Wyoming hometown after prison and seeks to reconnect with her daughter while forming a relationship with Ledger (Tyriq Withers). The film opened in U.S. theaters on March 13, 2026, and is the third Colleen Hoover adaptation to receive a theatrical release after It Ends With Us and Regretting You.
Why the Playbook Has Not Changed
Screen Rant and industry analysts have framed the opening as a record-breaking romance performance in a crowded weekend; the consistency of that framing across outlets reflects how the same playbook is reported as news each time. Universal’s release strategy—wide release, target female-skewing opening, rely on the Hoover brand and genre loyalty—mirrors what worked for It Ends With Us and Regretting You. The Conversation has argued that successful book-to-screen romance depends on respecting the genre; the industry response has been to keep greenlighting the same type of project and the same release strategy rather than diversifying. Until studios change how they develop, release, and market these adaptations, the pattern will hold: one or two breakouts and a steady stream of the same formula. Reminders of Him’s box office is a win for the film and for Universal, and also proof that the romance pipeline is still run by the same playbook.
That pattern is consistent across prestige coverage and reflects how the genre is evaluated: as drama first, with audience expectations often secondary.
Deadline and Variety have both reported that the film’s demographics and release strategy mirror prior Hoover adaptations; the playbook is unchanged and the industry has not meaningfully diversified how it develops or markets these projects. Reminders of Him’s strong opening is a win for Universal and for the film, and it is also proof that the romance pipeline is still run by the same playbook until studios change how they develop, release, and market these adaptations.
The pattern holds until studios change how they develop, release, and market these adaptations; the formula is unchanged.
The industry response has been to keep greenlighting the same type of project.