Kevin Spacey’s diminished fanbase helped get him a place in the history books at the US box office this weekend, with Billionaire Boys Club, a film that could mark the disgraced actor’s final high-profile acting role, grossing just $126 on its opening day – including a measly $9 at a single cinema in a California suburb.

Billionaire Boys Club, which was shot a year and a half before Spacey was accused by numerous men of sexual assault and harassment, was somewhat inevitably buried by its distributor upon its release, appearing in just eight cinemas in states including Phoenix, Detroit and Florida, despite a high-wattage cast that also included Baby Driver star Ansel Elgort and Kingsman’s Taron Egerton.

But the film’s historically low gross, which is speculated to be less than $500 for the full weekend, is slightly misleading: Billionaire Boys Club was released across video-on-demand services in the US in early August, meaning it may have already been sought out by curious film fans potentially too embarrassed to see it in a cinema.

Despite that, the Hollywood Reporter has noted that the film’s takings were “particularly poor” despite its early VOD release. To put that into perspective, the thriller 10x10, in which Kelly Reilly is held captive in a box by Luke Evans for 90 minutes, was released simultaneously in 10 US cinemas and on VOD in April, yet still managed to gross $2,000 in its opening weekend.