The Phnom Penh Post

Disney’s live-action Aladdin casts a box-office spell

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Aladdinthe­Musical ALADDIN apparently still has the old magic, as the new Disney film took in an estimated $86.1 million in the Friday-toSunday period in North America to lead all box-office offerings, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations reported.

The film, released on the US’s four-day Memorial Day weekend, was expected to earn $105 million when Monday’s ticket sales are included, well beyond earlier estimates of around $80 million, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

The live-action movie, directed by Guy Ritchie, stars Will Smith as the genie and the Egyptianbo­rn Canadian actor Mena Massoud as the wily charmer who pretends to be a prince to catch the attention of the lovely Jasmine (Naomi Scott).

The new version is an adaptation of Disney’s 1992 Aladdin, which featured the unforgetta­ble voice of Robin Williams as the fast-talking genie (and the less well-known actor Scott Weinger as Aladdin).

Last week’s box-office leader, Lionsgate’s John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum, slipped to second, taking in $24.4 million for three days ($30.5 million for four).

Keanu Reaves again stars as retired hitman John Wick, this time being chased by an army of killers after a contract is put on his head. Also starring are Halle Berry, Laurence Fishburne, Ian McShane and Anjelica Huston.

In third was Disney blockbuste­r Avengers: Endgame, taking in an estimated $16.8 million for three days ($21.9 million for four).

Avengers, with an all-star cast including Robert Downey Jr, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Bradley Cooper, Scarlett Johansson and Josh Brolin, has broken domestic records but, with a worldwide take of $2.68 billion, is still shy of the $2.79 billion earned by all-time leader Avatar in 2009.

Fourth place went to Warner Bros’ Pokemon: Detective Pikachu, at $13.3 million ($17 million). Its animated title character (voiced by Ryan Reynolds) teams up with a young boy ( Justice Smith, in a live-action role) to seek the boy’s missing father.

And in fifth was new Sony horror thriller Brightburn, at $7.5 million ($9 million). Elizabeth Banks, David Denman and Jackson A. Dunn star in the story of an alien tot who arrives on Earth and realizes, as he grows up on a Kansas farm, that he has superpower­s.

 ?? DIA DIPASUPIL / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? Michael James Scott visits Build to discuss City. at Build Studio on May 23, 2019 in New York
DIA DIPASUPIL / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Michael James Scott visits Build to discuss City. at Build Studio on May 23, 2019 in New York

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