Box
Office: 'Halloween Kills' Scores Bloody Great
$50.3 Million Debut, 'The Last Duel' Bombs
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[October 18, 2021]
By Brent Lang
LOS ANGELES (Variety.com)
- Universal and Blumhouse's "Halloween Kills"
topped the weekend box office with a $50.3
million debut. That's a bloody good showing
considering that the film is being release
simultaneously in theaters and on-demand via
Peacock, NBCUniversal's in-house Netflix
challenger. That kind of distribution pattern
has depressed ticket sales in recent months,
with films like Warner Bros.' "Cry Macho" and
"The Suicide Squad" failing to resonate with
moviegoers when they were made available at the
same time on HBO Max. |
An exclusive theatrical release
wasn't enough to save "The Last Duel," a lavish
historical epic starring Adam Driver, Jodie
Comer and, venturing very far afield from the
Cambridge/Southie milieu that made them stars in
"Good Will Hunting," Matt Damon and Ben Affleck.
The drama, which is set in 14th century France,
bombed, grossing a pallid $4.8 million. That's a
disastrous result given that the film cost north
of $100 million and a sign that older audiences
remain skittish about returning to theaters when
COVID and its variants are still circulating.
The film was inherited by Walt Disney after it
bought 20th Century Fox Studios in 2019. Ridley
Scott, who also oversaw this fall's "House of
Gucci," directed. Critics were kind, but that
couldn't save the movie, which is limping to a
fifth-place finish.
Elsewhere, MGM, United Artists Releasing and Eon
Productions' "No Time to Die" earned $24.3
million in its second weekend of release, good
enough for a second-place finish. That's a drop
of 56%, which is roughly in line with how other
James Bond films have performed in their
sophomore frame. It brings the film's domestic
haul to $99.5 million, a respected result in
pandemic times. However, the problem for the 007
sequel is that it was greenlit in pre-COVID
times and carries a massive $250 million price
tag along with more than $100 million in
promotional spending. Given those costs, "No
Time to Die" will have trouble turning a profit
during its theatrical run.
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Sony's "Venom Let The Be
Carnage" slides in at third place, capturing
$16.5 million in its web. That brings its
domestic haul to $169.1 million, an impressive
figure that guarantees audiences haven't seen
the last of this symbiote. UAR and MGM's "The
Addams Family 2" nabbed fourth place with $7.2
million, pushing its domestic gross to $42.3
million.
"Halloween Kills" revives the un-killable
Michael Myers (last seen incinerating in a
house) and brings back franchise star Jamie Lee
Curtis. David Gordon Green, who orchestrated the
carnage in the 2018 reboot, returns as director.
They'll all be back for more bloodletting with
2022 "Halloween Ends." Given that this is a film
series that dates back to 1978, that title is
likely a misnomer.
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