Bangkok Post

War For The Planet Of The Apes roars past Spider-Man

- JAKE COYLE AP

Monkey business still pays. War For The Planet Of The Apes took down Spider-Man: Homecoming at the North American box office, opening with an estimated US$56.5 million (1.9 billion baht) in ticket sales.

Though some initially expected a closer race, Spider-Man dropped to second with $45.2 million after its $117 million debut last weekend. But director Matt Reeves’ War For The Planet Of The Apes pulled away thanks to strong reviews for the third instalment of the rebooted Apes franchise. Led by Andy Serkis’ celebrated motion-capture performanc­e as the ape leader Caesar, War For The Planet Of The Apes won a 94% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Fox’s Apes led something of a summer anomaly: There is an unusual confluence of acclaimed films in release. Five of the top six at the box office ( Apes, Homecoming, Baby Driver, The Big Sick and Wonder Woman) boast Rotten Tomatoes rankings of 92 or better, and the sixth ( Despicable Me 3) was largely received as a solid enough family release.

Summer, rarely a critics’ paradise, is suddenly flush with good movies.

“What I think sets the Planet Of The Apes, these three films, apart from other franchise films, is that it’s not gratuitous sequel-itis,’’ said Chris Aronson, Fox’s distributi­on chief. “This is storytelli­ng, and it’s episodic storytelli­ng. It’s not, ‘Well, let’s put the band back together’.”

But there were also hints of franchise fatigue for the Apes series. Reeves’ latest edition came in closer to 2012’s Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes, and well below the $72.6 million debut of 2014’s Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes.

The film, which cost about $150 million to produce, added $46 million from overseas. ( Spider-Man: Homecoming was still king overseas, where it added $72.3 million to bring its global haul to nearly $500 million.)

Aronson believes the good word-ofmouth will carry War For The Planet Of The Apes. “At the end of the day, we’re going to have a terrific multiple and it will be a lot closer to Dawn than it will be Rise,” he said. Universal’s family sequel Despicable Me 3 pulled in $18.9 million in its third week, bringing its cumulative total to $188 million domestical­ly.

Sony’s Edgar Wright action comedy Baby Driver followed behind with $8.8 million; its three week gross is $73.2 million.

The weekend’s other most notable new entrant was Kumail Nanjiani’s acclaimed romantic comedy The Big Sick, which expanded to about 2,600 cinemas after three weeks of limited release.

The Lionsgate-Amazon Studios film, produced by Judd Apatow, made $7.6 million — a rare success for a comedy in a summer full of disappoint­ment .

The horror film Wish Upon, from Broad Green Pictures, was the weekend’s only other new release. It opened with

$5.5 million and a dismal C CinemaScor­e from audiences.

Next weekend may well continue the streak of well-reviewed summer releases. Christophe­r Nolan’s World War II thriller Dunkirk lands in cinemas following rapturous early reactions.

 ??  ?? Woody Harrelson, centre, in a scene from War For The Planet Of The Apes.
Woody Harrelson, centre, in a scene from War For The Planet Of The Apes.

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