Times Colonist

Pirates sails, Baywatch sinks in theatres

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LOS ANGELES — It was smooth sailing to the top spot at the box office for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, but the waters were choppier for the Dwayne Johnson comedy Baywatch.

The fifth instalment of the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise commandeer­ed $62.2 million in its first three days in theatres.

The Johnny Depp-starrer is projected to take in $76.6 million over the four-day U.S. holiday weekend.

It was the second-lowest domestic opening for the nearly $4-billion franchise, but the latest film, which cost a reported $230 million to produce, has massive internatio­nal appeal. Its four-day global total is expected to hit $300 million.

Having the majority of profits come from internatio­nal receipts is not worrying Walt Disney Studios.

“This is a trend that we’ve seen play out over the course of these films,” said Dave Hollis, executive vice-president of distributi­on for Disney. Pirates is a huge spectacle film of the kind that internatio­nal audiences continue to be drawn toward … but the domestic response also shows that the audience for this film is clearly there.”

Baywatch, meanwhile, is sinking like a rock. The critically derided update of the 1990s TV show earned only $18.1 million over the weekend against a nearly $70 million price tag. Including Thursday earnings, the film is projected to collect $26.6 million by the close of Memorial Day.

Even Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 did better in its fourth weekend. The space opera added $19.9 million to take second place ahead of Baywatch at the box office.

This month’s box office has also been tough on nearly every film except Guardians of the Galaxy.

Even the decently reviewed Alien: Covenant dropped an uncommonly steep 71 per cent in its second weekend in theatres to take fourth place with $10.5 million.

The teen romance Everything, Everything rounded out the top five with $6.2 million.

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