Boston Herald

'Sonic 2’ speeds to No. 1

‘Ambulance’ stalls in weekend box office

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“Sonic the Hedgehog 2” sped to the top of the charts in its opening weekend, earning an impressive $71 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Paramount’s PG-rated sequel easily bested the weekend’s other major newcomer, Michael Bay’s “Ambulance,” which faltered in theaters.

“Sonic 2,” which brings back the first film’s director, writers and cast, including James Marsden, Jim Carrey and Ben Schwartz, who voices the blue video game character, opened in 4,234 locations and actually surpassed its predecesso­r’s opening weekend. The first “Sonic the Hedgehog” opened over the Presidents Day holiday weekend in February 2020, earning $58 million in its first three days.

“The normal pattern domestical­ly is that sequels slide a little bit,” said Chris Aronson, the president of domestic distributi­on for Paramount. “But we certainly bucked that trend.”

For a sequel to open 22% above the first, Aronson added, is “quite remarkable.”

“The filmmakers did a great job of being in service of not only the general audience but Sonic fans themselves,” Aronson said. “Many feel it’s a bigger, better film than the first one.

Comscore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian said that one of the big questions of the pandemic was whether families would return to movie theaters with seemingly limitless viewing options available at home. According to exit polls, families made up 58% of the “Sonic 2” audience.

“There’s been some indication that they wanted to go back with movies like ‘Sing 2,’ but it’s moved in fits and starts,” said Dergarabed­ian. “This says once and for all that families want to go back”

“Sonic 2” is also the latest in a string of theatrical hits for Paramount in 2022, including “Scream,” “Jackass Forever” and “The Lost City,” which is still in the top five.

Meanwhile, “Ambulance” got off to a bumpy start in its first weekend. With an estimated $8.7 million in grosses, it opened behind Sony’s “Morbius,” down 74% in weekend two, and “The Lost City.” Bay’s nail-biter about a botched bank robbery was released by Universal and stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II and Eiza Gonzalez.

Its tepid launch proved a head-scratcher for many. Reviews weren’t terrible (it’s at a 69% on Rotten Tomatoes versus “Sonic 2’s” 67%) and on paper “Ambulance” appears to be the kind of throwback, big screen blockbuste­r spectacle that would draw significan­t crowds.

“This is a filmmaker who will forever be looked at as a blockbuste­r director, whether you like his movies or not. The bar is always raised for someone like that,” Dergarabed­ian said. “But this is a different kind of movie and I think that’s why we’re seeing these numbers. It’s not trying to be ‘Transforme­rs.’ If Bay’s name wasn’t on it, expectatio­ns wouldn’t be as high.”

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 ?? Photos courtesy paraMount pictures and sega of aMerica ?? ‘QUITE REMARKABLE’: From left, James Marsden, Tika Sumpter and Sonic, voiced by Ben Schwartz, are seen in ‘Sonic the Hedgehog 2.’
Photos courtesy paraMount pictures and sega of aMerica ‘QUITE REMARKABLE’: From left, James Marsden, Tika Sumpter and Sonic, voiced by Ben Schwartz, are seen in ‘Sonic the Hedgehog 2.’

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