BusinessMirror

‘ALITA’ LEADS A SLOW PRESIDENTS DAY WEEKEND

- By Lindsey Bahr

LOS ANGELES—The sci-fi fantasy Alita: Battle Angel topped the charts and beat out a number of newcomers including the meta romantic comedy Isn’t It Romantic and the horror sequel Happy Death Day 2U in its first weekend in theaters, but it is a victory with a few caveats. It’s leading the slowest Presidents Day weekend at the box office in almost 20 years and has a ways to go to make up its costly budget.

20th Century Fox said on Sunday that the James Cameron-produced film earned an estimated $27.8 million over the weekend against a reported $170-million budget, which includes cost-saving tax incentives and rebates. It’s made $36.5 million total since its debut on Thursday.

Robert Rodriguez directed the future-set film starring Rosa Salazar as a cyborg with no memory of her past. Critics were mixed on the results, and it’s become just the latest pricey and ambitious non-Star

Wars, non-Marvel or DC sci-fi film to do less-thanstella­r business at the box office, the last being the Peter Jackson-produced Mortal Engines.

It is quite a tumble (56.4 percent) from last year’s record Presidents Day box office when Black Panther

grossed $202 million over the three-day weekend and propelled the industry total to $286.6 million.

The weekend has in recent years been host to the openings of high earners from Deadpool to Fifty Shades of Grey. This year, total weekend earnings amount to only $125 million.

The rest of the charts remained fairly lackluster, as well. Last week’s champ, The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part, fell 38 percent in its second weekend earning $21.2 million, bringing its total to $62.7 million—which is less than the first film earned in its opening weekend.

Warner Bros. also had the No. 3 movie this weekend with its meta romantic comedy Isn’t It Romantic, starring Rebel Wilson as a woman who bonks her head and wakes up in a rom-com. It debuted to $14.2 million and has earned $20.5 million since its opening earlier in the week.

The other romantic comedy offering in theaters,

What Men Want, with Taraji P. Henson, landed in fourth place in its second weekend with $10.9 million. And Happy Death Day 2U, the horror sequel from Blumhouse and Universal, rounded out the top 5 with $9.8 million. The first film opened over twice as high, with over $26 million, but with a production budget under $10 million, it’s still bound for success.

The Dwayne Johnson wrestling film Fighting With My Family also opened in four theaters on Wednesday, earning $131,625 over the weekend.

Seven weeks into the new year and the box office is still struggling, down nearly 20 percent from where industry totals were last year. “We’ve been down every week this year,” said comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian. “This weekend is emblematic of what is going on at the box office.”

Dergarabed­ian said that slow weekends beget more slow weekends—with less foot traffic at the theaters, fewer people are seeing previews for what’s to come and the cycle just continues. But Captain Marvel may be coming to save the day on March 8.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at US and Canadian theaters, according to comScore. Where available, the latest internatio­nal numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included.

1. Alita: Battle Angel, $27.8 million ($56.2 million internatio­nal)

2. The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part, $21.2 million ($12.1 million internatio­nal)

3. Isn’t It Romantic, $14.2 million

4. What Men Want, $10.9 million ($2.2 million internatio­nal)

5. Happy Death Day 2U, $9.8 million ($11.8 million internatio­nal)

6. Cold Pursuit, $6 million ($1.5 million internatio­nal)

7. The Upside, $5.6 million ($466,000 internatio­nal)

8. Glass, $3.9 million ($3.6 million internatio­nal)

9. The Prodigy, $3.2 million

10. Green Book, $2.8 million ($9 million internatio­nal). n

 ??  ?? RobeRt RodRiguez directed the sci-fi fantasy Alita: Battle Angel, starring Rosa Salazar as a cyborg with no memory of her past. it may have opened as the No. 1 film in North America but with the less-thanspecta­cular box-office haul, it has a ways to go to make up its costly budget.
RobeRt RodRiguez directed the sci-fi fantasy Alita: Battle Angel, starring Rosa Salazar as a cyborg with no memory of her past. it may have opened as the No. 1 film in North America but with the less-thanspecta­cular box-office haul, it has a ways to go to make up its costly budget.
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