Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Nun teaches others a lesson

- SONAIYA KELLEY

LOS ANGELES — Warner Bros. dominated the top five spots of last weekend’s box office (and three of the top five), marking its fifth consecutiv­e week at the top of the charts.

“It’s extraordin­ary, I want to do it all the time,” said Jeff Goldstein, the studio’s distributi­on chief.

In first place, New Line Cinema’s horror spinoff The Nun, based on a character introduced in the successful Conjuring franchise, opened with a series-best $53.8 million, according to figures from measuremen­t firm ComScore.

The picture, which cost about $22 million to make, came in well above analyst prediction­s of $36 million, a strong start for the fall movie season. “I think it’s the subject matter,” Goldstein said. “… Nuns are scary.”

He attributed the success in part to a large turnout by historical­ly Catholic Hispanic audiences. “It was higher on this movie dramatical­ly than the other movies in this series,” Goldstein said. “We had a 35 percent share of Hispanic audiences, as opposed to The Conjuring, which was 17 percent, Conjuring 2 was 28 percent, Annabelle, 22 percent, and Annabelle 2, 26 percent.”

The Conjuring, released in 2013, and its spinoffs have proved highly profitable at the box office, grossing upward of $1.2 billion so far. Loosely based on the investigat­ions of demonologi­sts Ed and Lorraine Warren, the latest movie expands on the history of a monster first introduced in The Conjuring 2.

Despite the huge success of The Nun, it is the second in the series to receive a low mark on review aggregatio­n site Rotten Tomatoes, with a 28 percent rotten score. It also got a C rating from audiences on Cinema Score. Despite this, Goldstein doesn’t rule out the possibilit­y of a sequel. “I don’t know for sure, but I would guess it, I would advocate for it,” he said.

Two of the studio’s other movies landed among the top five: In third place, Crazy Rich Asians added $13.1 million in its fourth weekend. And giant shark movie The Meg, now in its fifth weekend, added about $6 million, landing at No. 4.

Warner Bros.’ winning streak comes less than a year after its big budget superhero team-up Justice League disappoint­ed at the box office. “There’s no question it’s always about content and if they’re good movies,” Goldstein said of this year’s contrastin­g result. “If we figure out a way to attract an audience that is interested in our content, then we’ll be successful. And absent that, we won’t be.”

At No. 2, STX Entertainm­ent’s Jennifer Garner-led action thriller Peppermint earned $13.4 million.

Garner stars as a woman out for vengeance after her husband and daughter are gunned down in front of her. The film, directed by Taken director Pierre Morel, came in within prediction­s of $10 million to $15 million. It earned mixed reviews from audiences and critics with a B-plus rating on CinemaScor­e and a 13 percent rotten rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

In fifth place, Columbia’s Searching, now in its third weekend, added 802 theaters and about $4.6 million, a killer hold for a film initially released on limited screens.

In limited release, Freestyle Releasing opened faith-based drama God Bless the Broken Road with about $1.4 million, below expectatio­ns of $4 million. The film earned negative reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, with a 13 percent rotten rating.

 ??  ?? Taissa Farmiga (center) stars as Sister Irene in New Line Cinema’s horror film The Nun, which is based on a character introduced in the successful Conjuring franchise. It came in first at last weekend’s box office and made about $53.8 million.
Taissa Farmiga (center) stars as Sister Irene in New Line Cinema’s horror film The Nun, which is based on a character introduced in the successful Conjuring franchise. It came in first at last weekend’s box office and made about $53.8 million.

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