Business World

Ant-Man and Wasp fly to top of US box office

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HOLLYWOOD — The Disney/Marvel film Ant-Man and the Wasp swatted away competitio­n over the weekend, logging $76 million in ticket sales in North America, according to industry estimates on Sunday.

The buzzy film, a sequel to 2015’s Ant-Man, has outpaced that movie’s opening weekend by about 33% in ticket sales, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations reported.

It is the 20th release in Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe series of comic book movies, and the first to feature a woman in the title.

This time, Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) languishes under house arrest in San Francisco after being caught as his shrinkable superhero alter-ego fighting some of the other Avengers in Civil War.

Struggling to rebalance his home life with his responsibi­lities as AntMan, he’s confronted by Hope Van Dyne (the Wasp, played by Evangeline Lilly) and her father, the brilliant quantum physicist Hank Pym, with an urgent new mission.

The cast includes Michael Douglas, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Bobby Cannavale.

The dynamic insect duo far surpassed the three- day revenues of the weekend’s second- place movie, Incredible­s 2 from Disney and Pixar, which took in $29 million.

But that was enough to push it past Finding Dory as the top-grossing animated film of all time, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Incredible­s 2 has reached $504 million in total domestic ticket sales and more than $700 million worldwide, Exhibitor Relations said.

Craig T. Nelson plays the voice of torso-heavy Mr. Incredible while Holly Hunter voices his stretchabl­e wife in the family-friendly flick.

In third spot, at $ 28.6 million, was Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, from Universal, which in its third week has already passed the $ 1 billion mark globally. The film has Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard struggling to contain dinosaurs rescued from a Caribbean island and sheltered — temporaril­y, dinosaurs being dinosaurs — in a California mansion.

Fourth spot went to another Universal film, newly released The First Purge, at $17.2 million.

The dystopian horror film, starring Ethan Hawke and Lena Headey, is a prequel set during the original Purge, a 12- hour period when all crime is legal but certain government officials may not be harmed.

In fifth was Sicario: Day of the Soldado from Sony, at $7.3 million in its second week. The action thriller has Benicio del Toro and Josh Brolin teaming up to fight drug cartels smuggling “terrorists” across the Mexican border.

All the top five were sequels ( or prequels), Exhibitor Relations noted.

Rounding out the top 10 were: Uncle Drew ($ 6.6 million); Ocean’s 8 ($ 5.3 million); Tag ($ 3.1 million); Won’t You Be My Neighbor? ($ 2.6 million); Deadpool 2 ($ 1.7 million). —

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