Business World

Apes flicks Spider-Man side to win box-office war

-

LOS ANGELES — New release War for the Planet of the Apes won this weekend’s war for box-office supremacy in North America, riding on strong reviews and ever more natural-looking apes to take in an estimated $56.5 million.

The Fox/ Chemin Entertainm­ent production managed to outdraw Spider-Man: Homecoming, which fell by more than half from its opening three- day weekend to pull in $45.2 million, Web site Exhibitor Relations reported.

War, directed by Matt Reeves, tells the continuing story of how intelligen­t primate Caesar (Andy Serkis) and other apes battle the forces led by an evil human dictator ( Woody Harrelson). The film, made for $150 million, scored a glowing 94% on the Rotten Tomatoes site.

Its closest weekend competitio­n, Sony’s Spider-Man, draws a similarly strong 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. The film stars Tom Holland as a young Peter Parker, ably mentored by Robert Downey, Jr. as Iron Man as he takes on bad guy Vulture ( Michael Keaton). In third place was Despicable Me 3, far behind at $18.9 million. In Universal’s animated offering, Steve Carell stars as the voice of bad guy-turned-protagonis­t Gru — and his twin brother Dru, while Kristen Wiig voices Gru’s wife Lucy and South Park co-creator Trey Parker plays villain Balthazar Bratt.

The film has done much better overseas than at home, according to Hollywood Reporter, which says its global gross of $519.4 million includes a whopping $113.6 million from viewers in China.

Placing fourth was Sony’s heist thriller Baby Driver, with Ansel Elgort ( The Fault in our Stars) starring as a gifted getaway driver with a hearing problem. It netted $8.8 million.

And in a surprising fifth place among the big-studio blockbuste­rs was independen­t rom- com The Big Sick from Lionsgate, taking in $7.6 million in its first week in wide release.

Sick stars Kumail Nanjiani in the semi- autobiogra­phical role of a Pakistani-American standup comic who resists his parents’ insistent efforts to find a wife for him, and instead falls in love with comedy- club customer Emily, played by Zoe Kazan.

The film, co-written by Nanjiani and the real-life Emily, his wife, rates a resounding 97% on Rotten Tomatoes and is credited by the New York Times with no less than “revitalizi­ng an often moribund subgenre with a true story of love, death and... everyday comedy.”

Rounding out the top 10 were: Wonder Woman ($ 6.9 million); Wish Upon ($5.6 million); Cars 3 ($3.2 million); Transforme­rs: The Last Knight ($ 2.8 million); and The House ($1.8 million). —

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines