The South Korean box office has a new No. 1, and it arrived in a tight weekend fight.

The Devil Wears Prada 2 took the top spot for May 8–10, according to KOBIS, the tracking service run by the Korean Film Council. The sequel earned $1.3 million from 195,513 admissions, enough to move past its nearest rival and claim first place in its second weekend. That margin appears narrow, which underscores how competitive the market remained across the frame.

Key Facts

  • The Devil Wears Prada 2 ranked No. 1 in South Korea for the May 8–10 weekend.
  • KOBIS reported $1.3 million in weekend revenue.
  • The film sold 195,513 tickets during the frame.
  • The result came in the sequel’s second weekend in release.

The shift matters because it signals more than a routine chart change. A sequel built around a globally familiar brand managed to build enough momentum to overtake the field after opening weekend. In a crowded theatrical market, that kind of hold can point to steady audience interest rather than a one-off surge.

The weekend result suggests South Korean moviegoers still respond to recognizable franchises when word of mouth and timing line up.

Reports indicate the race at the top stayed close, which makes the win more notable. KOBIS data gives the sequel a measurable edge, but the narrow gap suggests several titles still compete for attention as the market spreads audiences across multiple releases. That dynamic can reshape quickly from one weekend to the next, especially when admissions totals remain tightly packed.

What happens next will show whether this was a brief lift or the start of a stronger run. If the film keeps drawing audiences in its coming frames, it could turn a narrow weekend victory into a durable box-office story. For distributors and exhibitors, that matters because every small shift at the top offers a read on what South Korean audiences want right now: familiar brands, sustained interest, and reasons to keep showing up.