Boston Herald

‘Black Panther’ keeps its spot on top

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NEW YORK — Not since “Avatar” has a box-office hit had the kind of staying power of “Black Panther.” Ryan Coogler’s comic-book sensation yesterday became the first film since James Cameron’s 2009 smash to top the weekend box office five straight weekends.

MOVIES

The Disney release grossed $27 million in ticket sales over the weekend, according to studio estimates, pushing its domestic haul to $605.4 million. Worldwide, “Black Panther” has grossed more than $1.1 billion.

Though “Black Panther” has had little competitio­n to contend with throughout February and March, such consistenc­y is especially rare in today’s movie-going world. Before “Avatar,” the last film to do it was 1999’s “The Sixth Sense.”

That left second place to the MGM-Warner Bros.’ rebooted “Tomb Raider,” starring Alicia Vikander as the archaeolog­ist adventurer Lara Croft. The $90 million film opened with $23.5 million, largely failing to stir much excitement among moviegoers. With Vikander stepping in for Angelina Jolie, Roar Uthaug’s “Tomb Raider” is an attempt to rekindle a video game-adapted franchise that faded quickly the first time around.

Jeff Goldstein, distributi­on chief for Warner Bros., said “Tomb Raider” came close to studio expectatio­ns in North America but that internatio­nal ticket sales were a primary focus. “Tomb Raider” was No. 1 overseas, grossing $84.5 million, including a $41.1 million in China.

“Internatio­nal was always a key part of the strategy,” Goldstein said.

Of course, the continuing success of “Black Panther” also didn’t help “Tomb Raider.”

“Black Panther” has shown considerab­ly fewer legs in China, however. Though it has grossed $96 million in two weeks of release in China, “Black Panther” slid steeply in its second weekend.

Yet last week, “Black Panther” even bested Disney’s own “A Wrinkle in Time,” Ava DuVernay’s adaptation of Madeleine L’Engle’s 1962 novel of the same name. In its second week, “A Wrinkle in Time” dropped 50 percent with $16.6 million in ticket sales.

The surprise of the weekend was the Lionsgate-Roadside Attraction­s Christian drama “I Can Only Imagine,” which grossed $17.1 million on 1,629 screens.

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‘BLACK PANTHER’

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