The Nun teaches others a lesson
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.