The New Zealand Herald

Fallout Mission: Unpassable for Disney’s Pooh

- Jake Coyleap

Tom Cruise sped past Winnie-the-Pooh at the box office to lead all films for the second straight week with an estimated US$35 million ($52m) in ticket sales for Mission: Impossible — Fallout.

The success of Paramount Pictures’ sixth

Mission: Impossible instalment, along with muted enthusiasm for Disney’s Christophe­r Robin, made for a seldom-seen result: a Disney movie debuting in second place.

In a year where the studio has already notched three US$1 billion films worldwide

(Black Panther, Avengers: Infinity War and, as of this week, Incredible­s 2), the more modest Winnie-the-Pooh live-action revival opened with a relatively ho-hum $25m. Black Panther

became the third film to cross US$700m domestical­ly, a feat only previously accomplish­ed by Avatar and Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Made for around US$75m, Marc Forster’s

Christophe­r Robin stars Ewan McGregor as a grown-up Christophe­r Robin reunited with the beloved characters of the Hundred Acre Wood: Pooh, Tigger, Piglet and the rest.

While reviews were mixed, audiences gave it an “A” CinemaScor­e.

Cathleen Taff, head of distributi­on for Disney, confirmed that Christophe­r Robin has been denied a release in China, locking it out of the world’s second-largest film market.

While China provides no reason for the films it doesn’t select for its theatres, government censors have recently been blocking images of Winnie-the-Pooh after bloggers began using him to parody Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The success of Mission: Impossible — which has made US$124.5m thus far along with US$205m internatio­nally — is helping solidify a comeback summer for Hollywood.

The summer box office is up 10.6 per cent from last year’s record-low season, according to comScore, and year-to-date ticket sales are up 8 per cent.

R-rated action-comedy The Spy Who Dumped Me debuted in third with US$12.4m for Lionsgate.

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