These days, movies clear $100 million at the box office pretty regularly. What used to be considered an undeniable benchmark of success is no longer that, and, in fact, oftentimes a film can gross over $100 million now and still be seen as a disappointment. However, those movies usually cost well over $100 million to make. If a movie that cost, say, $10 million achieves it, $100 million once again feels like an incredible milestone. And, if that movie does it in under a week? It’s mind-blowing. That’s the kind of success that the new film Backrooms is experiencing. After a record-setting opening weekend of about $81 million (which, coincidentally, is about how many views the original Backrooms video has on YouTube), the film has added to that total and will cross $100 million on Wednesday, less than a week into release. The number makes it A24’s highest-grossing movie ever domestically (passing last year’s hit, Marty Supreme) and sets it up to be maybe the distributor’s highest-grossing film ever worldwide. Internationally speaking, it only has to beat Best Picture winner Everything Everywhere All at Once, which grossed about $148 million, and Marty Supreme, the current record holder at $191 million. Both of which are not just achievable. They are inevitable.