Austin American-Statesman

‘Deadpool 2’ tops ‘Avengers’ but fails to surpass its predecesso­r

- By Sonaiya Kelley Los Angeles Times

Two Josh Brolin-led Marvel movies dominated the domestic box office this weekend, led by 20th Century Fox’s “Deadpool 2.”

“It’s Deadpool’s world, and we’re just living in it,” said Chris Aronson, the studio’s president of distributi­on.

The film opened in first place with $125 million, the second biggest debut for an R-rated film ever, though below analysts’ prediction­s of $130 million to $150 million.

A sequel to 2016’s mega-successful “Deadpool,” the film failed to beat the original’s opening weekend haul of $132.4 million, which Aronson says may be because of the original’s holiday-weekend launch.

“I don’t want anyone to lose sight of the fact that we opened the original on a huge moviegoing weekend that included Valentine’s Day on Sunday and Presidents Day on Monday,” Aronson said. “It was one of those strange weekends where the calendar conspired to have both of those moviegoing days in the same weekend. So the fact that we’re in a non-holiday weekend and we’re only 5.5 percent behind, we’re not alarmed at all. In fact, we’re extremely heartened.”

Starring Ryan Reynolds as the titular “merc with the mouth,” “Deadpool 2” cost an estimated $110 million to produce and stars Brolin as the film’s villain, Cable.

Also starring “Atlanta” star Zazie Beetz as Domino, the film earned positive reviews from audiences and critics with an A rating on CinemaScor­e and an 83 percent “fresh” rating on review aggregatio­n site Rotten Tomatoes.

Bumped from the top spot for the first time in four weeks, Disney’s “Avengers: Infinity War” came in second, adding an additional $28.7 million in ticket sales for a cumulative $595 million.

The film, which also features Brolin in the villain role as Thanos, took in $113.1 million worldwide this weekend, for a global cumulative of $1.8 billion, making it the No. 4 global release of all time.

“I think it comes down to the characters and storytelli­ng,” said Aronson of the bankabilit­y of Marvel films. “I think the (superhero) genre may be separated from traditiona­l movies, but I think the characters and storytelli­ng are similar. And I think ‘Deadpool’ supplies both of those in huge amounts.”

Paramount Pictures’ “Book Club” opened in third place with $12.5 million, above analysts’ prediction of $9 million.

A comedy about a group of women whose love lives are affected by their reading of the S&M novel “Fifty Shades of Grey,” the film stars Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburge­n. It earned an A-minus rating on CinemaScor­e and a 58 percent rotten rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

In fourth place, Warner Bros.’ “Life of the Party” added $7.7 million in its second weekend in theaters, for a cumulative $31 million in ticket sales.

Rounding out the top five, Universal’s “Breaking In” drew $6.5 million in its second weekend, for a to-date total of $28.7 million.

Also new this week, Global Road Entertainm­ent’s “Show Dogs” came in at No. 6 with $6 million in earnings.

Next week, Buena Vista and Disney will premiere “Solo: A Star Wars Story” for Memorial Day weekend.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX ?? Ryan Reynolds stars as Deadpool in “Deadpool 2,” which opened this weekend in first place with $125 million.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX Ryan Reynolds stars as Deadpool in “Deadpool 2,” which opened this weekend in first place with $125 million.

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