Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘West Side Story’ debuts with $10.5M

- BY JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK — Despite critical acclaim and two yearsworth of anticipati­on, Steven Spielberg’s lavish “West Side Story” revival made little noise at the box office, debuting with $10.5 million in ticket sales, according to studio estimates Sunday — a worrisome result for a movie industry struggling to recapture its finger-snapping rhythm.

A dazzling widescreen adaptation and Spielberg’s first musical, “West Side Story” was one of the year’s most eagerly awaited titles. With a script by Tony Kushner and Rita Moreno returning to her breakthrou­gh film 60 years later, the $100-million “West Side Story” epitomizes a grand-scale prestige film that Hollywood infrequent­ly produces anymore. It hit theaters on a wave of glowing reviews and expectatio­ns that it could play a starring role in March’s Academy Awards.

But “West Side Story” faced a challengin­g marketplac­e for both adult-driven releases and musicals. Audiences have steadily returned to multiplexe­s in the second year of the pandemic, but older moviegoers, who made up the bulk of ticket-buyers for Spielberg’s latest, have been among the slowest to return.

Musicals, too, have struggled to catch on in theaters. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “In the Heights” launched with $11 million in June but the Warner Bros. release simultaneo­usly streamed on HBO Max. The critically panned “Dear Evan Hanson,” from Universal, debuted with $7.4 million in September.

But this was Spielberg. If anyone could reignite moviegoing, the thinking went, it was him. Surely, one of the movies’ dazzling craftsmen, a director synonymous with box office, could spark a fuller revival in theaters. “West Side Story,” too, is among the most beloved musicals. The 1961 film, directed by Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise, made $43.7 million (or about $400 million adjusted for inflation) and won 10 Oscars, including best picture.

“West Side Story” can still be expected to play well through the lucrative holiday corridor, during which younger-skewing films like “Spider-Man: No Way Home” (expected to next weekend become the first pandemic release to open with $100 million or more domestical­ly) and “Sing 2” will likely be the top draws. Film executives are hoping the spreading omicron variant of COVID-19 doesn’t set the box office back just as Hollywood is nearing its most profitable period.

But the muted reception for “West Side Story” will concern the industry. Hopes had long been pinned on Spielberg, with his song-anddance spectacula­r, to bring back some of the movies’ mojo. Instead, little right now outside of Marvel releases is finding big audiences. Many moviegoers simply haven’t returned yet.

 ?? NIKO TAVERNISE/20TH CENTURY STUDIOS VIA AP ?? Ariana DeBose as Anita, foreground left, and David Alvarez as Bernardo dance in “West Side Story.”
NIKO TAVERNISE/20TH CENTURY STUDIOS VIA AP Ariana DeBose as Anita, foreground left, and David Alvarez as Bernardo dance in “West Side Story.”

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