BusinessMirror

‘M3gan’ dolls up with $30.2M while ‘Avatar’ stays No. 1

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New York—the Blumhouse evil-doll horror film M3gan got off to a killer start, debuting with $30.2 million in ticket sales, according to studio estimates, while Avatar: The Way of Water continued its box-office reign in the top spot.

Universal Pictures’ M3gan, about a robot companion built for a young girl after her parents are killed in a car accident, rode strong buzz and viral dancing memes to an above expectatio­ns debut. in the low-budget slasher, starring Allison williams, Blumhouse and producer James wan crafted Hollywood’s first hit of the new year, likely spawning a new high-concept horror franchise.

Audiences gave the PG-13 film a “B” Cinemascor­e— though reviews (94 percent fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) were stronger for the modern, techy twist on a Child’s Play-like thriller. it added $10 million internatio­nally.

But while M3gan drew audiences largely in 2D showings, large-format screens continued to be soaked up by James Cameron’s Avatar: The Way of Water. The 3D three-hour sequel remained No. 1 for the fourth straight week in Us and Canadian theaters with $45 million in sales.

Cameron’s sci-fi spectacle has now surpassed $500 million domestical­ly and $1.7 billion globally. After dominating the otherwise lackluster holiday corridor, the Avatar sequel is nearly matching the original’s pace; the 2009 Avatar scored $50.3 million in its fourth weekend. The Way of Water already ranks as the seventh highest grossing film ever, not accounting for inflation—a total particular­ly owed to its strong overseas performanc­e. The film’s $1.2 billion in internatio­nal ticket sales exceeds that of any film released since the start of the pandemic.

M3gan was the only new film in wide release, though sony Pictures’ A Man Called Otto, starring Tom Hanks, played in 637 theaters after first launching in four theaters. The film, a remake of the swedish film A Man Called Ove, managed a solid $4.2 million ahead of its nationwide release on Friday.

Third place went to Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, with $13.1 million in its third week of release. The animated Universal Pictures sequel has tallied $87.7 million in three weeks, plus $109.7 million internatio­nally.

while many awards contenders have struggled in recent months at the box office, Darren Aronofsky’s The Whale is proving a modest exception. The A24 indie starring Brendan Fraser ranked seventh in its fifth week of release with $1.5 million and a cumulative total of $8.6 million—a good return for a film that cost an estimated $3 million to make.

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