Austin American-Statesman

‘Jumanji’ rolls along as newcomers beat expectatio­ns

- By Josh Rottenberg Los Angeles Times

Demonstrat­ing the continued drawing power of Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart, “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” fended off a pair of male-skewing, action-oriented newcomers “12 Strong” and “Den of Thieves” to top the box office for a third straight week.

On a relatively quiet weekend in what is generally considered a kind of post-holiday box-office doldrums, the family-friendly “Jumanji” pulled in $20 million, boosted by the lack of competitio­n from any other major tentpoles. With a cumulative domestic haul of nearly $317 million, the film surpassed the 2012 James Bond film “Skyfall” to become Sony Pictures’ fifth-highest-grossing movie of all time.

Highlighti­ng the box-office potency of what the film industry broadly considers flyover country, “12 Strong” — the real-life story of a U.S. special forces team sent to Afghanista­n in the wake of 9/11, based on the best-selling book “Horse Soldiers” — came in second with $16.5 million, topping expectatio­ns of around $15 million.

The Alcon Entertainm­ent and Warner Bros. release, which stars Chris Hemsworth, Michael Shannon, Michael Peña and Trevante Rhodes, resonated particular­ly with older moviegoers, with nearly 80 percent of the audience over the age of 25. Though reviews were decidedly mixed, the film received an A CinemaScor­e from moviegoers.

“We really hit a patriotic chord,” said Jeff Goldstein, president of domestic distributi­on at Warner Bros. “Everywhere there’s a military market — in the South, the West, the Midwest — you just see those areas bubble to the top. And when you get outside of the military markets, they’re strong too. We definitely can play for a long time.”

Coming in third — and also skewing toward an older, male audience — STXfilms’ action-thriller “Den of Thieves” earned $15.3 million, a surprising­ly robust showing for the critically lambasted, Gerard Butler-starring movie about a group of cops trying to stop a bank heist.

In its second weekend in wide release, director Steven Spielberg’s Pentagon Papers drama “The Post” landed in fourth place, pulling in $12.2 million. With the combined appeal of stars Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks — and against the backdrop of the Trump administra­tion’s ongoing war against the mainstream press — 20th Century Fox is hoping the film, which has earned more than $45 million to date, will hold strongly in the coming weeks.

Rounding out the top five with $11 million in grosses, Hugh Jackman’s P.T. Barnum musical “The Greatest Showman” continued to show surprising­ly strong legs. Since its rather underwhelm­ing opening over the holidays, the film has gone on to gross more than $113 million domestical­ly and over $231 million worldwide.

The weekend’s other newcomer, Roadside Attraction­s and Liddell Entertainm­ent’s modestly budgeted, country-music-inflected romance “Forever My Girl,” debuted in 10th place with a better-than-expected $4.7 million.

As Oscar season gathers steam, a handful of contenders expanded into wider release over the weekend to try to capitalize on the buzz of awards nomination­s in what continues to be an unusually wide open and unpredicta­ble race.

In its fourth weekend of release, director Paul Thomas Anderson’s romantic period drama “Phantom Thread” expanded to nearly 900 theaters nationwide, pulling in $3.4 million.

Skating into nearly 800 theaters, the Tonya Harding dramedy “I, Tonya” took in $3 million, while the high-stakes-poker drama “Molly’s Game” earned $1.7 million and the critically acclaimed coming-ofage film “Call Me by Your Name” pulled in $1.5 million.

Meanwhile, the juggernaut that is “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” continued to roll on. Bringing in $6.5 million in its sixth weekend in release, the film became the sixth movie ever to cross the $600 million mark at the domestic box office and has now earned a massive $1.3 billion globally.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ART SCIENCE GALLERY ?? “Solis,” by Clarissa Gonzalez, is one of the pieces featured in Art Science Gallery’s latest multi-artist show, “Solar.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ART SCIENCE GALLERY “Solis,” by Clarissa Gonzalez, is one of the pieces featured in Art Science Gallery’s latest multi-artist show, “Solar.”

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