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Daily Mail
15-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Dakota Johnson's Materialists places THIRD at box office behind How to Train Your Dragon
How To Train Your Dragon breathed some fire into the summer box office soaring easily to the top spot. The first live-action reimagining of the 2010 animated hit starring Mason Thames, Nico Parker and Gerard Butler, met expectations, pulling in nearly $84 million in ticket sales its first weekend in theaters. The film was a global hit as well, pulling in some $114.1 million from 81 markets, according to The Numbers for a global total of $197.8 million. In North America, HTTYD was the eighth-best opening of all time for Father's Day weekend and the fourth-biggest opening of the year to date. Among those attending over the weekend were Thames and Butler, who shared a video on social media celebrating the film. 'It was the first time we saw it in Imax,' Butler said, 'Yeah, it was insane,' Thames agreed. 'And we brought a bunch of friends,' Butler continued, showing a cheering crowd, joking, 'I didn't have to pay them that much money.' Then, pointing to his young co-star who plays Hiccup, the MTV Movie Award winner said, 'and this kid's going to be the biggest star of all, Mason. How good is he?.' Writing next to the post the Scottish actor said, 'Couldn't be more proud to call him my Viking son. As you can see, this sentiment is backed up by all the troops that went into battle with us last night. Go see #HowToTrainYourDragon and watch this kid soar. He's gonna break your heart in the best way.' The film received excellent reviews, including an A from CinemaScore, and a 98-percent rating from the audiences at Rotten Tomatoes. Last week's number one, the live-action Lilo & Stitch, dropped to distant second place after three weeks at the top. The Disney film starring Maia Kealoha, as Lilo along with Courtney B. Vance and Tia Carrere, earned $15 million domestically over the weekend, adding to its worldwide total of $366,371,809. Debuting in third place was the romantic comedy Materialists, starring Dakota Johnson as a matchmaker in the enviable position of having to choose between leading men Chris Evans and Pedro Pascal. The film, written and directed by Celine Dion, received a warm 87-percent rating from the critics at Rotten Tomatoes and audiences responded with a heartfelt $12 million at the box office. Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning dropped to fourth place, earning $10.3 million. The action-adventure starring Tom Cruise and his band of wily agents has not fared as well as other films in the popular franchise, but after a disappointing opening weekend in which it was bested by Lilo & Stitch, Final Reckoning has still managed to capture more than $467 million globally. Rounding out the top five was Ana De Armas in From the World of John Wick: Ballerina. The thriller focusing on a trained Russian assassin seeking revenge after her father's death, earned $9.4 million over the weekend.
Yahoo
14-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Box Office: ‘How to Train Your Dragon' Roaring to $83M U.S. Opening, $200M Globally
Borrowing a page from Disney's playbook is paying off big time for Universal at the box office, where the live-action remake of DreamWorks Animation's How to Train Your Dragon is headed for a series-best domestic opening of $82.7 million and $200.8 million globally, according to official early estimates. That includes a huge international haul of $117.7 million from 53 markets. Graced with rave exit scores from moviegoers — including an A CinemaScore and an almost-unheard-of 98 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes — the $150 million summer event pic is winning over both families and younger single adults who grew up on the animated franchise. It's the same phenomenon that turned Disney's live-action Lilo & Stitch into a box office blockbuster. Case-in-point: nearly half of those rushing out to see How to Train Your Dragon on Friday were Gen Zers between the ages of 13 and 24. This is the first time DreamWorks Animation, now owned by Universal, has done a live-action rendition, with a sequel already dated. More from The Hollywood Reporter Box Office: 'How to Train Your Dragon' Flies to Impressive $11.1M in Previews 'The Last of Us' Ratings Declined During Season 2. But Why? Dakota Johnson Says Hollywood Is a "Mess" Because Studios Want to "Remake the Same Things" If Universal's estimates hold, the $150 million movie will boast one of the top-10 starts of all time for a live-action reimagining, including the seventh-biggest at the worldwide box office, the eighth biggest domestically and the sixth-biggest internationally. It's also the eighth-best opening of all time for Father's Day weekend and the fourth-biggest opening of the year to date. Franchise regular Dean DeBlois returned to direct the live-action remake of his 2010 film about a young Viking boy named Hiccup (Mason Thames) who ignores the wishes of his father (Gerard Butler) and befriends a feared Night Fury dragon named Toothless. How to Train Your Dragon topped Friday's North America chart with a mighty $35.6 million from 4,356 theaters, including $11.1 million in previews. That's less than $10 million behind the three-day opening of the 2010 pic, which started off with $43.7 million, not adjusted for inflation. And it will easily be the top opening of the series, supplanting 2019's threequel How to Train Your Dragon: Hidden World ($55 million). After ruling the roost for three consecutive weekends and shattering numerous records, Lilo & Stitch is headed for a second-place finish domestically with $13 million to $14 million from 3,675 locations as its North American total climbs to $365 million. Globally, it crossed the $800 million milestone last week. Filmmaker Celine Song's new romantic drama Materialists, playing in 2,844 cinemas, is expected to come in third with an estimated $11 million to $12 million. If so, that would mark A24's third-biggest wide opening, unadjusted. The star-studded pic features Dakota Johnson as an ambitious New York matchmaker pairing clients with rich partners who herself becomes entangled in a love triangle with a former flame (Chris Evans) and a high-powered exec (Pedro Pascal). Song herself worked as a matchmaker as a way of supporting her dreams of becoming a filmmaker. Critics like Materialists— Song's follow up to Past Lives — more than moviegoers. The film received a worrisome B- CinemaScore from ticket buyers, while the audience score on Rotten Tomatoes is a tepid 70 percent. How to Train Your Dragon has a huge advantage in taking over Imax screens that had belonged to Paramount and Skydance's Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning for three weekends, but the Tom Cruise-starrer is looking at a fall of just 37 percent in its fourth outing to $9.3 million from 2,942 theaters for a domestic tally of roughly $165 million through Sunday as it prepares to clear $500 million globally. Dragon is also playing in numerous other large-format screen this weekend. All told, premium screens are responsible for 40 percent of the pic's gross to date. Lionsgate's John Wick spinoff Ballerina continues to struggle in its second weekend, at least in the U.S., despite stellar audience exits and solid reviews. The female-led action pic, starring franchise newcomer Ana de Armas, is expected to tumble 64 percent to an estimated $8.7 million for a 10-day domestic tally of $41.1 million. Numbers will be updated Sunday morning. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now
Yahoo
10-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Why ‘Ballerina' Didn't Leap Into The Rafters With $25M Opening – Sunday AM Box Office Update
SUNDAY AM WRITETHRU after Saturday AM update: One of the most intriguing yet mindboggling dynamics in moviegoing is that which prevents audiences from getting off the couch, even when the word of mouth out there is great on a movie. Such was the dilemma this weekend for Lionsgate's John Wick off-shoot Ballerina, which didn't budge from a $25M opening even after an A- CinemaScore, one of the best in the Wick franchise. While that grade for the Len Wiseman-directed movie is under the franchise's best in show, John Wick: Chapter 4's A, it's well above the original John Wick's B, and in the same great company as John Wick 2 & 3 which also nabbed A-s. Friday for the Ana de Armas movie was $10.65M including previews with Saturday down 8.2% to $8.2M, and Sunday forecasted at $6.1M. The global start was $51M from 82 territories. More from Deadline 'From The World Of John Wick: Ballerina' Review: Ana De Armas Gives Spinoff A Fighting Chance 'Lilo & Stitch': All The Box Office Records Broken 'Lilo & Stitch' Nears $800M Global, 'Mission: Impossible - Final Reckoning' Tops $450M & 'Ballerina' Bows To $51M WW - International Box Office It's clear that a portion of the John Wick-faithful loved this movie, as did Deadline critic Gregory Nussen (I had zero patience for it), but Ballerina never jumped into its forecasted $35M+ rafters. Again, it's not a good sign for any studio when you show up on tracking at point A, and drop to point B or C. This happened recently with Karate Kid: Legends. I'm told this less-than-wanted opening isn't going to damage the library value of John Wick; Ballerina is an extra bonus myriad sources tell me for revenues down the road. The question becomes how long Ballerina's legs are in this marketplace. Do these exits bode well for a second weekend hold? And will the marketplace be kind to Ballerina in the long run? There's F1, M3GAN 2.0, Jurassic World Rebirth on the horizon and exhibition decks will be cleared. It would be nice per sources if Ballerina can get to a final $80M-$90M domestic. We're not going to go into profit here, we don't have enough information, however, there's a long-term value in franchise libraries (note, Lionsgate only owns half since they sell off foreign). The low $90M production cost on Ballerina had foreign sales cover 60%-70% of its budget with a $45M domestic P&A spend. Why didn't more people go? There's something to be said that when the movie popped on tracking three weeks ago, respondents were upbeat that the movie was 'From the World of John Wick,' but when they looked closer noticed that Keanu Reeves wasn't entirely in the movie. Lionsgate made it obvious in their marketing that Reeves is in the film, and even featured him in one of their one sheets. One film finance source yelled at me yesterday about the less-than-expected Ballerina performance, 'If their exits were so great, why the hell was the review embargo lift so late?!' The review embargo lift was on Wednesday, June 4, the day before previews began. In Lionsgate's defense, their strategy on a review embargo lift isn't unlike that executed by rival studios for a bulk of their titles. In addition, John Wick: Chapter 4 launched and teed off its excitement at SXSW, and that festival crowd would have embraced and screamed out praise of Ballerina if it was there. SXSW could have used another cool fanboy film this year. Also, let's not forget about that title: Ballerina doesn't scream action film. There's also the sense that many have already seen these girl-with-the-gun movies before, and there are plenty of copycats on streaming (i.e. Charlize Theron's The Old Guard, Gal Gadot's Heart of Stone, Jennifer Lopez's The Mother) — so why rush out? But this one is through the lens of John Wick, and ya know, stunts! But you can't just swap out our favorite puppy-loving, gun-toting surfer dude for a female lead, and that's potentially why more of the Wick-faithful aren't going. In full confession, I walked out of Ballerina (and I did walk back in for the ending). It was too wash, rinse, repeat in the fisticuffs and bang-bang, and there isn't a biplane scene. This wasn't Nic Winding Refn, John Woo or Ari Aster's version of Ballerina. I noticed fireflies at the Chinese Theater during the screening and chased them out to the lobby. However, my cynicism aside, what matters more to me is the overall worth of motion picture commerce, and if there are movies that I don't like, which rise to the top and beat the odds at the box office, well then, I'm an absolute champ of that, and drop-dead fascinated by it. Funny enough, Ballerina in its Russian-dancers-turned-assassins feature is similar to another feature from Lionsgate, Hunger Games alums Francis Lawrence and Jennifer Lawrence's Red Sparrow (2018), however, the de Armas movie is opening higher than that one which 20th Century Fox couldn't figure out at a $16.8M start. Also, as we mentioned, – with its submarine and biplane stunts and the whole scheduled viewing by moviegoers for the best seats in Imax ($3.6M alone this weekend for the Tom Cruise eighthquel, running cume of $31M) isn't doing Ballerina any favors with a third place and third weekend of $15M. Granted, Mission: Impossible is older skewing at 62% over 25 to Ballerina's 45% over 35, but there's an overlap in that both are 63%/37% male to female, and also with men over 25 (Ballerina at 49%, Mission at 52%) and women over 25 (Ballerina 27% and Mission 32%). I believed back at CinemaCon, Ballerina would have had a better place on the calendar earlier in the year before A Minecraft Movie when we were starving for product. However, the reason why the movie is here in the first weekend of June was due to Reeves' availability on the press tour. As we reported during the preview, while $25M may internally not be the right number for Lionsgate execs and the industry, but exhibition isn't crying: There's meat in the marketplace and this weekend is coming in at $115.5M, +11% a year ago when Sony's Bad Boys: Ride or Die (which that studio took credit on reviving the sluggish summer box office) opened to $56.6M. In hindsight, Ballerina is better here in its counter-programming than during the desert days. Can you imagine if Ballerina wasn't here? Then we'd be talking about how the summer box office has taken a turn for the worst. The industry can be grateful, and there's more hits ahead this season in Universal's Jurassic World Rebirth and Warner Bros' Superman. Geniuses of box office at the studios shrug their shoulders and observe that this is as good as it gets with solo female action movies; this movie was never expected to do John Wick business (it's only beating the original's $14.4M start), and was always expected to be in line with Furiosa ($26.3M 3-day) and Alita: Battle Angel ($28.5M 3-day). Speaking of Furiosa, she had a similar dilemma in her marketing to Ballerina's: You can't just swap out an iconic action hero (Mad Max) for another character, and the execution looked very similar to previous installments, which isn't provoking more to flock. Note, pre-streaming era, girl-with-a-gun movies did do much better, i.e. Angelina Jolie's Wanted ($50.9M), Scarlett Johansson's Lucy ($43.8M), however, there was a $20M opening range in Quentin Tarantino's cult classic Kill Bill Vol. 1 ($22.2M), all unadjusted for inflation. Other diagnostics on Ballerina show 40% of the box office being muscled by 1000 PLFs. AMC Burbank as the highest grossing location this weekend with $72K with a strong play in the South Central and West. Diversity demos are 39% Caucasian, 27% Latino and Hispanic, 18% Black and 11% Asian American. It's been a while since Lionsgate had a big a tentpole (arguably since November 2023's Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes), and Ballerina was so important to them that they wanted to delay the film for additional shoots (I'm told the entire project was five years in the making), and get John Wick architect Chad Stahelski's hands in the mix to get this right. Also, in all fairness again, Ballerina is about amping the overall John Wick franchise library, expanding the universe, and delivering something (semi) different for the fans. Let's not slap Lionsgate's wrists for taking a try, just like we can't fault Warner Bros. for making Furiosa. However with each spinoff, and Donnie Yen's Caine is getting one, spinoffs are a business of diminishing returns. We can't deny that Lionsgate pushed the movie. Hell, they created (count 'em) 27 one sheets for the movie, and that type of quantity shows a studio's commitment to a movie's marketing. De Armas has been working it since CinemaCon. However, something didn't bring horses to water. Disney's Lilo & Stitch continue to be monsters at the box office with a Disney reported $32.5M third weekend after a $9.3M third Friday, $13.1M Saturday. Chart updated with Sunday figures: Lilo & Stitch (Dis) 4,185 (-225) theaters, Fri $9.3M (-45%) Sat $13.1M Sun $10.1M 3-day $32.5M (-47%), Total $335.7M/Wk 3 Ballerina (LG) 3,409 theaters, Fri $10.65M Sat $8.2M Sun $6.1M 3-day $25M/Wk 1 Mission: Impossible – Final Reckoning (Par) 3,496 (-365) theaters Fri $4M (-47%) Sat $6.3M Sun $4.6M 3-day $15M (-45%), Total $149M/Wk 3 Karate Kid: Legends (Sony) 3,859 (+50) theaters, Fri $2.45M (-67%) Sat $3.5M Sun $2.7M 3-day $8.7M (-57%), Total $35.4M/Wk 2 Final Destination: Bloodlines (NL) 2,867 (-267) Fri $1.9M (-40%) Sat $2.6M Sun $1.9M 3-day $6.5M (-40%), Total $123.5M/Wk 4 The Phoenician Scheme (Foc) 1,678 (+1,672) theaters, Fri $2.56M (+844%), Sat $2.1M Sun $1.58M 3-day $6.25M (+1015%), Total $7M/Wk 2 Bring Her Back (A24) 2,425 (-24) theaters, Fri $1.09M (-65%) Sat $1.3M Sun $1.07M 3-day $3.5M (-51%), Total $14.1M/Wk 2 Dan Da Dan: Evil Eye (GKIDS) 1,080 theaters, Fri $1.5M, Sat $938K Sun $650K 3-day $3.09M/ Wk 1 Sinners (WB) 1,518 (-620) theaters Fri $850K (-46%) Sat $1.1M Sun $885K 3-day $2.9M (-45%), Total $272.6M/Wk 8 Thunderbolts (Dis) 1,955 (-565) theaters Fri $677K (-50%) Sat $1M Sun $823K 3-day $2.5M (-48%), Total $186.4M/Wk 6 Notables: Dogma Resurrected (Iconic) 700 theaters Fri $203K, Sat $275K Sun $500K, 3-day $978K, Total $2M/Wk 1Solid grosses here from a couple of shows a day, we're told. Dangerous Animals (IFC) 1,636 theaters, Fri $760K Sat $463K Sun $310K, 3-day $1.53M/Wk 1Very fun Australian horror movie with a new spin on the shark genre which played in Director's Fortnight at Cannes. It's 85% with critics, and 71% with the Rotten Tomatoes audience score. B CinemaScore, which is high for a genre pic. But there's a lot of R-rated stuff out there, and this one got buried at No. 11. Close to half the audience was 18-34. Best business was the East, West and South with LA's AMC Grove the best grossing location with close to $10k. Life of Chuck (NEON) 16 theaters, Fri $111K Sat $58K Sun $47K, 3-day $216K, Wk 1 The TIFF People's choice winner from Mike Flanagan played in NYC, LA, Chicago, San Francisco, Boston, Denver, Austin and Phoenix with solid grosses in NYC, LA and Austin. Neon hosted early screenings and there were live Q&A's at AMC the past week (Burbank, Century City and LSQ), livestream Q&A's with Alamo Drafthouse, Screen Unseen with AMC, Mystery Movie with Regal and the Secret Movie Series with Cinemark. **** Focus Features' Phoenician Scheme skewed guys at 56% with an 18-34 audience in the 59% range. The movie repped a return for Wes Anderson to his dysfunctional family motif, and was far more linear than the off kilter Asteroid City which had a higher wide break at $9M, and ended its stateside run at $28.1M. LA was the best market, followed by NYC and San Francisco. Alamo Drafthouse Theaters delivered the best grosses in the country, repping 8% of the weekend which is 4x their normal market share. The Sony owned chain is hosting a Phoenician Scheme experience at the New Mission which is the top grossing venue in the U.S. and ranks as the 10th best engagement this weekend in North America. There was also a takeover at the Angelika an NYC which continued to deliver as did NYC's AMC Lincoln Center. Dan Da Dan: Evil Eye is the first episode of te second season of the GKIDs and Science SARU series, co-directed by Fuga Yamashiro and longtime Science SARU veteran Abel Gongora. The sci-fi comedy romance is an adaptation of author Yukinobu Tatsu's manga of the same name, which is currently serialized in 'Shonen Jump Plus' by SHUEISHA. The original manga series recently crossed 10 million in sales, more than doubling its circulation following the global success of animated series. Dan Da Dan follows Momo, a high school girl from a family of spirit mediums, and her classmate Okarun, an occult geek. In the latest chapter, Momo and Okarun set out on their latest adventure, traveling to a hot springs town home rented by Jiji, Momo's childhood friend and former crush, with the goal to solve the mystery surrounding his family. When they arrive, strange locals derail their investigation before it can properly begin, and the group soon learns there's more lurking under the surface of the town than they could possibly have imagined. The 18-34 bunch repped 80% of business with 36% Caucasian, 33% Latino and Hispanic, 15% Asian American and 11% Black. The West, South Central, Midwest and South were the most money-making markets for the pic with NYC's AMC Empire grossing over $17K. FRIDAY EARLY EVENING: Currently, many have Ballerina in the mid-$20M range, but Lionsgate believes there's a potential path to $30M at 3,409 theaters. Nobody in distribution land wants to a see a movie with great exits underperform. We need all the wins we can get. Ballerina is a R-rated movie, and the audiences for those always come out at night. What's hard here is that this spinoff came on tracking three weeks ago at $35M+, so if it eases to mid-$20Ms, eeesh. Friday, including $3.5M previews, is just under $11M. I'm hearing now the production cost was in the low-$90M net range, more than 60% of that funded by foreign sales. Given that this is part of the crown jewel John Wick franchise, Lionsgate was determined to make the best movie possible, hence the year delay, hence the additional photography. With an estimated $45M P&A spend Stateside, iSpot shows that close to 38% was spent on NBA Finals spots, and those go for hundreds of thousands of dollars. Ya can't say that Lionsgate didn't push Ballerina out in the limelight, not to mention Ana de Armas has been promoting in Dwayne Johnson-like fashion since CinemaCon, all over social, etc. Ballerina has just under 1,000 PLF auditoriums. RELATED: It's a stacked summer, and this male-skewing action movie is in the wake of Paramount/Skydance's Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning, which has a firm hand on Imax screens, heading to a $14M (-49%) third weekend in third place at 3,496. That's better than Dead Reckoning's $10.6M third sesh. Running cume by Sunday is $148.2M. As we mentioned all along this week, No. 1 is Disney's to lose as Lilo & Stitch is seeing a third weekend of $32M-$34M after a $9M-$10M third Friday at 4,185 theaters. Running cume is between $335M-$337M. Fourth is Sony's Karate Kid: Legends at 3,859 sites. The pic is seeing $2.3M in its second Friday with a second weekend in the $9M range, -56%. Ten day running cume is $35.7M. Fifth is Focus Features' second-weekend wide expansion of The Phoenician Scheme, which jumped from six locations in NYC and L.A. to 1,678 theaters with a second Friday of $2.5M and second weekend of $5.7M. Currently, Wes Anderson's second weekend isn't as high as his Asteroid City, which landed at $9M in 2023. We'll see where this goes. Four stars, 81% positive and a good 62% definite recommend from a crowd that's 64% under 35, mostly guys at 57%. FRIDAY AM UPDATE, after exclusive: Lionsgate is reporting $3.75M for the previews to Thunder Road's John Wick spinoff Ballerina. That number is from Wednesday and Thursday shows. The Rotten Tomatoes audience score stands at 93%, equal to 2023's John Wick: Chapter 4's which is best in the Keanu Reeves franchise. Ballerina's audience score also is higher than previous solo femme action movies Furiosa (88%, 2024) and Alita: Battle Angel (91%, 2019). Exits on PostTrak were excellent Thursday night with a 79% definite recommend. Again, that's the fans, but it speaks volumes; we've said this before, but with the Comscore/Screen Engine polling service, 'definite recommend' carries more weight than the positivity score which is 87%, still very good. This should bode well for Ballerina prancing past $30M. Men showed up to the guns-blazing ballet Thursday night at 61%. Best definite recommend and positive scores came from women over 25, who showed up at 29% and gave it an 83% and 90%, respectively. Ballerina takes place during the events of John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum and follows orphaned Eve Macarro (Ana de Armas), who is beginning her training in the assassin traditions of the Ruska Roma. Her father died at the hands of Gabriel Bryne's The Chancellor. She's as mad as hell, and she's not going to take it anymore. RELATED: Social media org RelishMix says: 'Convo on Ballerina is running positive for action fans excited to see one of their favorite franchises expand in glorious fashion. The cast is the cause of a lot of the film's positive sentiments including Ana de Armas, who has gained a lot of good will in other roles, and the promise of a returning Keanu Reeves as John Wick. Some comments are, 'I love Ana de Armas, and I'm so excited to see her doing this kind of film after No Time to Die. She was the best Bond Girl!' and 'I didn't actually expect Keanu to show up in the movie, glad he is gonna be in it!' plus, 'Did I spy Norman Reedus? Between Ian McShane, Keanu, and the legendary Mr. Lance Reddick'. Many are pleased with the direction of this film and the action spotlighted in the trailer, sharing, 'I was wondering if they were going to do a spinoff with the dancers! This looks EPIC!!!' and, 'I really hope that this is the start of a trilogy.'' RelishMix also notes that Reedus has the most social media followers from the Ballerina cast with his activated 19.2M, and de Armas has 15M fans, while Reeves is still off the grid for his movies. And as we told you Thursday night, it was imminent that Disney's Lilo & Stitch would cross $300M at 4,410 theaters, the second movie to do so YTD at the domestic B.O. after Warner Bros/Legendary's A Minecraft Movie. The hybrid/live-action feature take on the 2002 Disney toon made $5M Thursday, -7% from Wednesday, for a second week of $86.1M and a running total of $303.1M. Lilo & Stitch is expected to reign again with a third weekend of $35M. Rest of the top five for the week is as follows: 2.) Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (Par) 3,861 theaters, Thu $2.3M (-10% from Wed), Wk $38.9M (-59%), Total $134.2M/Wk 2 3.) Karate Kid: Legends (Sony) 3,809 theaters, Thu $1.2M (-10%), Wk $26.7M, Wk 1 4.) Final Destination Bloodlines (NL) 3,134 theaters, Thu $1.M (-11%), Wk $16.1M (-48%), Total $117M, Wk 3 5.) Bring Her Back (A24) 2,449 theaters, Thu $675K (-12%), Wk $10.4M, Wk 1 EXCLUSIVE THURSDAY NIGHT: Sources tell us tonight that the John Wick spinoff Ballerina is looking to do around $3.5M-$4M in previews. That's all in, including Wednesday fan screenings that started at 7 p.m. as well as Thursday showtimes that began at 6 p.m. The hope is that the $80M-$90M Lionsgate production gets to north of $30M, which, as we told you, is around where recent female solo action movies openings live at the box office, read Furiosa ($26.3M 3-day last year) and 2019's Alita: Battle Angel ($28.5M 3-day in 2019). The Len Wiseman-directed spinoff produced by Thunder Road is expected to rank second behind Disney's third weekend of Lilo & Stitch, which is looking to make around $35M; that movie crosses $300M today. Ballerina was delayed a year to undergo additional photography. Upside on Ballerina is that Thursday night fans are enjoying the Ana de Armas movie with a Keanu Reeves cameo, giving a 94% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes — as of this minute, that's higher than any John Wick RT popcorn score; John Wick: Chapter 4 received a 93% in 2023. Critically, even though Ballerina is 72% certified fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, it's not as high as the John Wick movies, which had film review scores ranging from 86%-94% certified fresh. Ballerina's all-in preview cash is on par with the Thursday preview box office of Furiosa ($3.5M) and higher than the $2.4M Tuesday night preview cash of Alita: Battle Angel. Essentially, the thinking is to comp Ballerina to female solo action movies instead of John Wick movies. Female solo action movies are a completely different subgenre and don't always attract the full-on male audience that typically attends an action movie with a male leading star. Still, Ballerina's combined preview cash is higher than the Thursday night of 2017's John Wick 2 ($2.2M) but far under both 2019's John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum ($5.9M, ) and 2023's John Wick: Chapter 4 ($8.9M, best preview cash in franchise). We'll have more updates as they happen Friday morning. Lionsgate didn't return our request for comment. Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery Tony Awards: Every Best Musical Winner Since 1949 Tony Awards: Every Best Play Winner Since 1947


NBC News
02-06-2025
- Entertainment
- NBC News
'Lilo & Stitch' passes 'Sinners' to become 2nd highest grossing film of 2025
"Lilo & Stich" and "Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning" dominated the box office charts again after fueling a record-breaking Memorial Day weekend. Theaters in the U.S. and Canada had several new films to offer this weekend as well, including Sony's family friendly "Karate Kid: Legends" and the A24 horror movie "Bring Her Back." According to studio estimates Sunday, it added up to a robust $149 million post-holiday weekend that's up over 120% from the same timeframe last year. Disney's live-action hybrid "Lilo & Stitch" took first place again with $63 million from 4,410 locations in North America. It was enough to pass "Sinners" to become the second-highest grossing movie of the year with $280.1 million in domestic ticket sales. Globally, its running total is $610.8 million. "Sinners," meanwhile, is still going strong in its seventh weekend with another $5.2 million, bumping it to $267.1 million domestically and $350.1 million globally. The eighth "Mission: Impossible" movie also repeated in second place, with $27.3 million from 3,861 locations. As with "Lilo & Stitch," that's down 57% from its opening. With $122.6 million in domestic tickets sold, it's performing in line with the two previous installments. But with a reported production budget of $400 million, profitability is a ways off. Internationally, it added $76.1 million (including $25.2 million from China where it just opened), bringing its global total to $353.8 million. "This is the year of longterm playability," said Paul Dergarabedian, Comscore's senior media analyst. "The currency of word of mouth and the strong hold is more important than opening weekend dollars." Leading the newcomers was Sony's "Karate Kid: Legends," with an estimated $21 million from 3,809 locations. The movie brings Jackie Chan and Ralph Macchio together to train a new kid, the kung fu prodigy Li Fong (Ben Wang). Chan starred in a 2010 reboot of the 1984 original, while Macchio has found a new generation of fans in the series "Cobra Kai," which just concluded a six-season run. Reviews might have been mixed, but opening weekend audiences gave the PG-13 rated film a strong A- CinemaScore and 4.5 stars on PostTrak. It also only cost a reported $45 million to produce and has several weeks until a new family-friendly film arrives. "Karate Kid: Legends" opened earlier internationally and has a worldwide total of $47 million. Fourth place went "Final Destination: Bloodlines," which earned $10.8 million in its third weekend. The movie is the highest-grossing in the franchise, not accounting for inflation, with $229.3 million globally. The weekend's other big newcomer, "Bring Her Back" rounded out the top five with $7.1 million from 2,449 screens. Starring Sally Hawkins as a foster mother with some disturbing plans, the film is the sophomore feature of twin filmmakers Danny and Michael Philippou, who made the 2023 horror breakout "Talk to Me." It earned a rare-for-horror B+ CinemaScore and is essentially the only new film in the genre until "28 Years Later" opens on June 20. A new Wes Anderson movie, "The Phoenician Scheme," also debuted in New York and Los Angeles this weekend, where it made $270,000. It expands nationwide next weekend. The summer box office forecast remains promising, though there's a long way to go to get to the $4 billion target (a pre-pandemic norm that only the "Barbenheimer" summer has surpassed). The month of May is expected to close out with $973 million — up 75% from May 2024, according to data from Comscore. Top 10 movies by domestic box office With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore: 1. "Lilo & Stitch," $63 million. 2. "Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning," $27.3 million. 3. "Karate Kid: Legends," 21 million. 4. "Final Destination: Bloodlines," $10.8 million. 5. "Bring Her Back," $7.1 million. 6. "Sinners," $5.2 million. 7. "Thunderbolts," $4.8 million. 8. "Friendship," $2.6 million. 9. "The Last Rodeo," $2.1 million. 10. "j-hope Tour 'HOPE ON THE STAGE' in JAPAN: LIVE VIEWING," $939,173.


Chicago Tribune
01-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Chicago Tribune
‘Lilo & Stitch' passes ‘Sinners' to become 2nd highest grossing film of 2025
'Lilo & Stich' and 'Mission: Impossible—The Final Reckoning' dominated the box office charts again after fueling a record-breaking Memorial Day weekend. Theaters in the U.S. and Canada had several new films to offer this weekend as well, including Sony's family friendly 'Karate Kid: Legends' and the A24 horror movie 'Bring Her Back. ' According to studio estimates Sunday, it added up to a robust $149 million post-holiday weekend that's up over 120% from the same timeframe last year. Disney's live-action hybrid 'Lilo & Stitch' took first place again with $63 million from 4,410 locations in North America. It was enough to pass 'Sinners' to become the second-highest grossing movie of the year with $280.1 million in domestic ticket sales. Globally, its running total is $610.8 million. 'Sinners,' meanwhile, is still going strong in its seventh weekend with another $5.2 million, bumping it to $267.1 million domestically and $350.1 million globally. The eighth 'Mission: Impossible' movie also repeated in second place, with $27.3 million from 3,861 locations. As with 'Lilo & Stitch,' that's down 57% from its opening. With $122.6 million in domestic tickets sold, it's performing in line with the two previous installments. But with a reported production budget of $400 million, profitability is a ways off. Internationally, it added $76.1 million (including $25.2 million from China where it just opened), bringing its global total to $353.8 million. 'This is the year of longterm playability,' said Paul Dergarabedian, Comscore's senior media analyst. 'The currency of word of mouth and the strong hold is more important than opening weekend dollars.' Leading the newcomers was Sony's 'Karate Kid: Legends,' with an estimated $21 million from 3,809 locations. The movie brings Jackie Chan and Ralph Macchio together to train a new kid, the kung fu prodigy Li Fong (Ben Wang). Chan starred in a 2010 reboot of the 1984 original, while Macchio has found a new generation of fans in the series 'Cobra Kai,' which just concluded a six-season run. Reviews might have been mixed, but opening weekend audiences gave the PG-13 rated film a strong A- CinemaScore and 4.5 stars on PostTrak. It also only cost a reported $45 million to produce and has several weeks until a new family-friendly film arrives. 'Karate Kid: Legends' opened earlier internationally and has a worldwide total of $47 million. Fourth place went 'Final Destination: Bloodlines,' which earned $10.8 million in its third weekend. The movie is the highest-grossing in the franchise, not accounting for inflation, with $229.3 million globally. The weekend's other big newcomer, 'Bring Her Back' rounded out the top five with $7.1 million from 2,449 screens. Starring Sally Hawkins as a foster mother with some disturbing plans, the film is the sophomore feature of twin filmmakers Danny and Michael Philippou, who made the 2023 horror breakout 'Talk to Me.' It earned a rare-for-horror B+ CinemaScore and is essentially the only new film in the genre until '28 Years Later' opens on June 20. A new Wes Anderson movie, 'The Phoenician Scheme,' also debuted in New York and Los Angeles this weekend, where it made $270,000. It expands nationwide next weekend. The summer box office forecast remains promising, though there's a long way to go to get to the $4 billion target (a pre-pandemic norm that only the 'Barbenheimer' summer has surpassed). The month of May is expected to close out with $973 million – up 75% from May 2024, according to data from Comscore. With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore: 1. 'Lilo & Stitch,' $63 million. 2. 'Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning,' $27.3 million. 3. 'Karate Kid: Legends,' 21 million. 4. 'Final Destination: Bloodlines,' $10.8 million. 5. 'Bring Her Back,' $7.1 million. 6. 'Sinners,' $5.2 million. 7. 'Thunderbolts,' $4.8 million. 8. 'Friendship,' $2.6 million. 9. 'The Last Rodeo,' $2.1 million. 10. 'j-hope Tour 'HOPE ON THE STAGE' in JAPAN: LIVE VIEWING,' $939,173.