Bangkok Post

For an encore, Joker is No.1 again at the box office

- JAKE COYLE

Put on a happy face. Joker is No.1 again.

Todd Phillip’s R-rated comic-book hit regained the top spot at the weekend box office in its fourth week of release, narrowly besting Maleficent: Mistress Of Evil. The Warner Bros’ sensation, starring Joaquin Phoenix, took in US$18.9 million (570.8 million baht) in ticket sales over the weekend, according to studio estimates on Sunday.

That came in just above the $18.6 million haul for the Walt Disney Co’s Maleficent sequel, which slid to second after a disappoint­ing No.1 debut last weekend of $36 million. Mistress Of Evil, starring Angelina Jolie, is performing better overseas, where it grossed $64.3 million over the weekend.

With such a close race at the top between Joker and Mistress Of Evil, the order could switch when final figures are released on Monday.

But ticket sales have continued to surge well past expectatio­ns for Joker. With a modest budget of $60 million, it’s been extraordin­arily profitable for Warner Bros — although the studio, to mitigate risk, shared costs with Bron Studios and Village Roadshow Pictures. This week, Joker became the most successful

R-rated moved ever, not accounting for inflation, in worldwide release. It’s made $849 million globally, including $47.8 million internatio­nally over the weekend. (Mel Gibson’s The Passion Of The Christ remains the R-rated domestic leader, with $370.8 million.)

Despite mixed reviews, Joker — a

Taxi Driver-styled spin on a comic-book origin story — has already amassed a box office total exceeding that of more mainstream superhero movies such as Thor: Ragnarok and Wonder Woman.

No new releases mustered any competitio­n with the holdovers. The best-performing newcomer was the STX Entertainm­ent horror thriller

Countdown. It grossed $9 million. Sony Screen Gems’ Black And Blue, a police thriller starring Naomie Harris, opened with $8.3 million.

Holding especially well was The Addams Family, United Artists and MGM’s Halloween-timed animated reboot of the macabre family. It slid just 28% in its second weekend with $11.7 million, good for third place

Much of the weekend’s action was in limited or expanding releases for acclaimed Oscar contenders.

Robert Eggers’ The Lighthouse, a black-and-white psychologi­cal drama starring Willem Dafoe and Robert

Pattinson as 19th century lighthouse keepers, made $3 million on just 586 screens for A24.

Taika Waititi’s Jojo Rabbit, about a 10-year-old boy growing up in Nazi Germany, expanded into 55 theatres, earning a strong $1 million. In September, the Fox Searchligh­t release won the Toronto Film Festival’s highly predictive audience award , setting it up as a potential Academy Awards favourite. Its initial expansion suggests it will be a hit with audiences, too. Less successful was the Bruce Springstee­n concert film Western Stars ($560,000 in 537 theatres).

Alfonso Gomez-Rejon’s The Current War also finally landed in theatres more than two years after it first premiered. Gomez-Rejon recut his film after Harvey Weinstein, shortly before his downfall, pushed out a critically panned version of the Thomas Edison (Benedict Cumberbatc­h) and George Westinghou­se (Michael Shannon) tale. Gomez-Rejon’s “director’s cut”, which 101 Studios acquired from the now-defunct Weinstein Co, opened with $2.7 million from about 1,000 theatres.

Terminator: Dark Fate, which is expected to lead the box office next weekend, got off to a $12.8 million start in a handful of internatio­nal markets before its stateside debut.

 ??  ?? Joaquin Phoenix in a scene from the film
Joker.
Joaquin Phoenix in a scene from the film Joker.

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