Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Audiences go for second helping of ‘Encanto’

- LINDSEY BAHR

Leftovers were on the menu for moviegoers in North America last weekend. “Encanto,” “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” and “House of Gucci” repeated in the top three spots, according to studio estimates on Sunday. All three films are playing exclusivel­y in theaters.

The weekend after Thanksgivi­ng is usually pretty quiet at the box office and this year was no exception considerin­g new offerings like “Flee” and “Benedetta” were playing only in limited release. Disney’s “Encanto,” an animated tale with original music from Lin-Manuel Miranda, earned $12.7 million to take the top spot, down 53% from its opening Nov. 26. Globally, it has earned $116.1 million to date.

“Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” took second place in its third weekend with $10.4 million, pushing it just past the $100 million threshold. And Ridley Scott’s ripped from the headlines “House of Gucci,” starring Lady Gaga and Adam Driver, came in third place in its second weekend with $6.8 million from 3,477 locations, bringing its domestic total to $33.6 million.

The big surprise came from film studio Fathom, which snagged the fourth place spot with “Christmas with The Chosen: The Messengers.” It isn’t exactly a movie but an episode of a faith-based streaming series, this one focuses on the birth of Jesus with several performanc­es by Christian groups, and was shot specifical­ly for a 10-day big screen run. Over the weekend, it grossed $4.1 million from 1,700 screens. Since Dec. 1, it has earned $9 million and has become the highest grossing in Fathom history.

“It just shows how powerful event cinema is and how movie theaters can benefit from nontraditi­onal releases,” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, the senior media analyst for Comscore.

In other notable showings, Warner Bros.’ brought “Dune” back to IMAX screens last weekend. The premium screens accounted for more than half of its $1.8 million domestic earnings.

In specialty releases, Paul Verhoeven’s “Benedetta,” released by IFC Films, grossed $145,000 from 202 theaters and Focus Features’ “Wolf” opened on 308 screens to $80,000. Neon’s animated documentar­y “Flee” also opened on four screens, earning $25,033. The film is about a man who fled Afghanista­n as a child in the 1980s.

Things should pick up this week as Steven Spielberg’s remake of “West Side Story” dances into theaters nationwide.

“We’re heading into the home stretch of the box office year at $3.7 billion,” Dergarabed­ian said.

Pre-pandemic, it was not uncommon for the North American box office to reach $11 billion. But Dergarabed­ian thinks that $4 billion is still in reach for 2021, should a certain superhero swing in to help on Dec. 17.

“I think the industry has the potential to generate $300 million over the next few weeks,” Dergarabed­ian added. “‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ could be the lynchpin to catapult us past the $4 billion mark.”

 ?? ?? In Disney’s “Encanto,” Mirabel (voice of Stephanie Beatriz) is a “girl with no apparent gift,” born into a Colombian family that received special powers after surviving a tragedy. The film remained at No. 1 for the second week with $12.7 million in box office receipts.
In Disney’s “Encanto,” Mirabel (voice of Stephanie Beatriz) is a “girl with no apparent gift,” born into a Colombian family that received special powers after surviving a tragedy. The film remained at No. 1 for the second week with $12.7 million in box office receipts.

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