Universal's eighth installment in the Fast and Furious
franchise proved to be a global box office titan when it opened
last weekend to a record-shattering $532.5 million. This time
around looks to tell mostly the same story -- while domestic
grosses slipped 61% from its first to second weekend, the movie
is still easily topping the box office with $38.7 million from
4,329 locations.
But slipping domestic earnings (and lower U.S. grosses than
"Furious 7," which pulled over $250 million in its first two
weekends versus "Fate's" current sum of $163.6 million) are
majorly overshadowed by the movie's international appeal. A
bankable, diverse cast including Dwayne Johnson, Vin Diesel and
Charlize Theron is leading the film, directed by F. Gary Gray,
to a two-frame global total of $744.8 million and worldwide sum
of $908.4 million.
While studios wait for summer season to commence, there are no
surprise hits to come of this weekend's releases. Warner Bros.'
"Unforgettable" seems to have slipped audiences' minds, earning
$4.8 million in its first weekend from 2,417 theaters.
"It just didn't resonate with the intended audience," said Jeff
Goldstein, the president of domestic distribution at Warner
Bros. Goldstein stressed that the movie was made for a moderate
price, and the marketing was "targeted and appropriate" for the
audience.
The directorial debut of Denise Di Novi stars Katherine Heigl as
a scorned ex-wife, and Rosario Dawson as a woman who is newly
engaged to the same man. In his review for Variety, critic Peter
Debruge lauded Heigl's "terrific" performance, and wrote that
her casting "savvily exploits the actress's prickly reputation
within the industry."
"Unforgettable" joins a string of so-so to disappointing
releases from Warner Bros. so far this year, including "Chips"
and "Fist Fight." At least the Heigl movie had a low production
budget ( about $12 million) to minimize losses.
"The Promise," too, couldn't follow through, despite a social
media push from stars including Leonardo DiCaprio, the
Kardashian sisters and Cher. The movie, from Open Road Films on
behalf of Survival Pictures, looks to round out the weekend with
about $4.1 million from 2,251 locations -- barely cracking the
top ten for the weekend.
[to top of second column] |
While "The Promise" could be considered a massive disappointment for
its $90 million price tag, the film's backers hoped it would raise
awareness more than earn money. Oscar Isaac, Charlotte Le Bon and
Christian Bale make up the central love triangle in the movie
directed by Terry George ("Hotel Rwanda"). The film is set during
the Armenian Genocide, and bankrolled by the late businessman Kirk
Kerkorian who wanted to bring visibility to the systematic
extermination to 1.5 million Armenians at the order of the Ottoman
empire in 1915 -- a politically fraught subject that Turkey
continues to deny happened. All proceeds made from the movie will be
donated to charity.
"We certainly hoped for a better box office result," said Open
Road's president of marketing Jonathan Helfgot, adding that the
film's mission was not purely box office-related. "It was about
bring the world's attention to this issue," he said. "And looking at
the amount of conversation ... it's undeniable that there's been
more focus and attention in the past two weeks than the past hundred
years since the atrocity took place."
Disney's latest animal documentary "Born in China," a co-production
between Disneynature and Shanghai Media Group, is making $5.1
million from 1,508 theaters. Narrated by John Krasinski, the docu
earned more than previous films "Monkey Kingdom" ($4.6 Million) and
"Bears" ($4.8 Million), and is the highest grossing Disneynature
opening since 2012's Chimpanzee ($10.7 million).
Cinelou's "Phoenix Forgotten" opened at 1,592 theaters to an
estimated $2 million this weekend. A24's "Free Fire" raked in only
$1 million from 1,070 spots in its first weekend.
In its fourth frame, Fox's "The Boss Baby" will bottle up $12.8
million from 3,697 locations, putting it in second place behind
"Fate." Disney's "Beauty and the Beast" should hold onto third with
$10 million from 3,315 theaters.
Warner Bros.' "Going in Style" should slide into fourth with $5
million from 3,038 spots. The heist comedy starring Morgan Freeman,
Michael Caine and Alan Arkin is targeting an older demo, and saw
only a 20% decline in ticket sales from its second to third weekend.
"Born in China" looks to round out the top five.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |