Austin American-Statesman

‘Dark Tower’ unseats ‘Dunkirk’ at box office

- By Sonaiya Kelley Los Angeles Times

The long-awaited sci-fi-western “The Dark Tower,” from Sony Pictures and Media Rights Capital, shot straight to No.1 at the box office, unseating Christophe­r Nolan’s “Dunkirk.”

“The Dark Tower,” based on a Stephen King fantasy series, opened to an estimated $19.5 million in the U.S. and Canada, in line with studio projection­s of $19 million and just short of analysts’ projection­s of $20 million to $25 million.

“‘Dark Tower’ was an ambitious and bold undertakin­g, and it was made at the right price,” said Adrian Smith, the studio’s distributi­on chief. “We’re looking forward, as there’s a lot of summer left. Our internatio­nal rollout is just starting to take off.”

Starring Idris Elba as nomadic gunslinger Roland Deschain and Matthew McConaughe­y as his nemesis, the Man in Black, the movie opened to generally poor reviews. Filmgoers (58 percent male, 42 percent female and 58 percent over age 25) gave it a B grade from CinemaScor­e, compared to the 18 percent positive rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes.

“Dunkirk,” Warner Bros.’ World War II drama, dropped to second place with $17.6 million. Its 34 percent drop from last weekend was among the smallest in the top 10.

“Dunkirk” grosses have been bolstered by powerful reviews and widespread interest in Nolan’s rendering of the mission to rescue Allied soldiers as German forces closed in.

Coming in third was Sony’s computer-generated comedy “The Emoji Movie,” with $12.4 million.

Universal’s R-rated ensemble comedy “Girls Trip” was fourth, with $11.4 million.

Rounding out the top five was Aviron’s Halle Berry-led thriller “Kidnap,” which debuted to $10.2 million, just above its modest $8 million projection. Starring Berry as a single mother on a mission to save her abducted son, the movie faced its own high-stakes drama in 2015 when it became engulfed in Relativity Media’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding­s. The film, directed by Luis Prieto, suffered multiple delays before the producers took it to Aviron Pictures.

Meanwhile, the wide release of “Detroit,” the latest from Oscar-winning director Kathryn Bigelow (“The Hurt Locker”), came in with $7.3 million, under analysts’ expectatio­ns of $10 million to $15 million.

The Annapurna Pictures-distribute­d movie, which centers on civil unrest in Detroit in 1967, increased to 3,000 screens over the weekend after a limited release on 20 the week previous. Reviews have been positive, with a 95 percent “fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes for the film starring John Boyega, Will Poulter, Algee Smith and Anthony Mackie.

In limited release, Fox Searchligh­t’s “Step” took in $145,000 across 29 locations in its first weekend. The documentar­y chronicles a high school step dance team in Baltimore. “Step” received a 94 percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and will add 24 cities this week.

Weinstein Co.’s “Wind River” opened in four locations, taking in $164,167. The murder mystery, which was directed by Taylor Sheridan, is set on an Indian reservatio­n in Wyoming and stars Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ILZE KITSHOFF / COLUMBIA PICTURES / SONY ?? Idris Elba, left, and Matthew McConaughe­y star in “The Dark Tower.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ILZE KITSHOFF / COLUMBIA PICTURES / SONY Idris Elba, left, and Matthew McConaughe­y star in “The Dark Tower.”

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