Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

- Photos and text from wire services

‘Boss Baby’ dethrones ‘Beauty and Beast’ with $49M debut

The taskmaster toddler of “The Boss Baby” dethroned Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” at the box office with a $49 million debut, handing its star Alec Baldwin what President Donald Trump might call a “huge” No. 1 opening.

Paramount Pictures suffered another flop with its controvers­yplagued “Ghost in the Shell.”

The DreamWorks Animation release from 20th Century Fox, starring Baldwin as a suit-clad baby, narrowly edged out the previous twoweek leader, according to studio estimates Sunday. The live-action “Beauty and the Beast” took in $48 million in its third weekend. Final North American ticket sales will be released today.

“We expected a decent opening. We didn’t expect to be No. 1,” said Chris Aronson, Fox distributi­on chief.

Despite the popularity of “Beauty and the Beast” (nearly $400 million domestical­ly in 17 days, and $876.3 million globally), “Boss Baby” was able to attract its own family audience.

Aronson credited that partly to the appeal of Baldwin, whose impression of Donald Trump on “Saturday Night Live” has lately been ubiquitous. “Boss Baby” also evokes Baldwin’s old “Glengarry Glen Ross” character with quips like “Cookies are for closers.”

“Alec Baldwin’s voice is recognizab­le, in general. But he’s so topical now because of some of the other things he’s doing right now,” Aronson said. “It’s a very distinctiv­e voice, and if you put it on a baby, it’s funny.”

“Ghost in the Shell,” a remake of a classic 1995 Japanese anime film, couldn’t compete with either familyfrie­ndly release. The dystopian science-fiction thriller, starring Scarlett Johansson, opened with just $19 million, a poor showing for a film that cost about $110 million to make.

Many took issue with the casting of Johansson as the cyborg protagonis­t who was Japanese in the original, calling it another example of Hollywood “whitewashi­ng.”

“We had hopes for better results domestical­ly. I think the conversati­on regarding casting impacted the reviews,” said Kyle Davies, domestic distributi­on chief for Paramount. “You’ve got a movie that is very important to the fanboys since it’s based on a Japanese anime movie. So you’re always trying to thread that needle between honoring the source material and make a movie for a mass audience. That’s challengin­g, but clearly the reviews didn’t help.”

Audiences appeared to agree with critics, giving the film a mediocre B Cinema Score.

“Ghost in the Shell” will instead hope to find more eager moviegoers in Japan (where the casting controvers­y has not resonated) and China next weekend. Opening in most other countries this weekend, “Ghosts in the Shell” took in a modest $40.1 million.

 ?? JASIN BOLAND — PARAMOUNT PICTURES AND DREAMWORKS PICTURES VIA AP ?? Scarlett Johansson appears in a scene from, “Ghost in the Shell.”
JASIN BOLAND — PARAMOUNT PICTURES AND DREAMWORKS PICTURES VIA AP Scarlett Johansson appears in a scene from, “Ghost in the Shell.”
 ?? DREAMWORKS ANIMATION VIA AP ?? Tim, voiced by Miles Bakshi, and Boss Baby, voiced by Alec Baldwin in a scene from the animated film “The Boss Baby.”
DREAMWORKS ANIMATION VIA AP Tim, voiced by Miles Bakshi, and Boss Baby, voiced by Alec Baldwin in a scene from the animated film “The Boss Baby.”

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