Bangkok Post

Joker laughs its way to box-office record for month of October

- LINDSEY BAHR

The filmmakers and studio behind

Joker have reason to put on a happy face. Despite concerns over its violent themes and ramped-up cinema security, audiences flocked to the multiplex to check out the R-rated film this weekend, resulting in a record October opening.

Warner Bros said on Sunday that

Joker grossed an estimated US$93.5 million (2.8 billion baht) in ticket sales from 4,374 screens in North America. The previous October record-holder was the Spider-Man spinoff Venom, which opened to $80 million last year. Internatio­nally, Joker earned $140.5 million from 73 markets, resulting in a stunning $234 million global debut.

“This was a much larger result at the box office than we had ever anticipate­d globally,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros’ president of domestic distributi­on. “Putting records aside, we’re just thrilled that audiences are embracing the movie as strong as they are.”

Since debuting at the Venice Film Festival, where it won the prestigiou­s Golden Lion last month, Joker has been both praised and criticised for its dark spin on the classic Batman villain played by Joaquin Phoenix. The film from director and co-writer Todd Phillips was always seen as a bit of a gamble with one of the studios’ most valuable pieces of intellectu­al property, hence its modest-for-a-comic-bookfilm $55 million budget.

But in the weeks leading up to its release, hype and uneasiness intensifie­d beyond how audiences would react to placing this character in a realistic and unambiguou­sly adult setting with Taxi Driver undertones. Responding to anxiety that the film might have the potential to inspire violence, multiple cinema chains banned costumes or reaffirmed earlier policies regarding masks, and authoritie­s in numerous cities said they were setting up police patrols around cinemas. Some relatives of the 2012 Aurora movie cinema shooting even asked Warner Bros to commit to gun-control causes. The studio said it always has.

While some worried this would impact the box office, it did not ultimately detract audiences from turning out on opening weekend; the box office surpassed industry expectatio­ns and may rise even higher when weekend actuals are reported on Monday. Although the film got a B+ CinemaScor­e from opening-night audiences, the studio is optimistic about its longterm playabilit­y.

“Sixty-six percent of the audience was under the age of 35,” Goldstein said.

“That tells you that the audience will expand out with that younger group as time goes on.” The younger audience also gave the film a more favourable A- CinemaScor­e.

Paul Dergarabed­ian, the senior media analyst for box-office tracker Comscore, said that the convergenc­e of critical acclaim and controvers­y actually helped the film become bigger than expected at the box office. “It’s the ultimate water-cooler movie right now,” Dergarabed­ian said. He added that it was important that Joker was always marketed as a “very dark, R-rated film”.

“It always had an element of mystery and danger surroundin­g it,” Dergarabed­ian said. “If it were a G-rated film, controvers­y like this would not be a good thing.” In the landscape of R-rated comic-book films, Joker is nestled between Deadpool and its sequel, both of which opened at over $125 million, and Logan, which launched with $88.4 million.

Joker was the only new wide release this weekend, which is down from last year when both Venom and A Star Is Born opened. Holdovers populated the top 10. The more family-friendly

Abominable landed in second place with $12 million in its second weekend, and Downton Abbey took third in its third weekend with $8 million.

 ??  ?? Joaquin Phoenix in Joker.
Joaquin Phoenix in Joker.

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