Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘Dory’ blows animation record out of the water

- By Lindsey Bahr AP Film Writer

LOS ANGELES >> The forgetful blue fish of “Finding Dory” is box office gold. The Pixar sequel far-surpassed its already Oceansized expectatio­ns to take in $136.2 million in North American theaters, making it the highest-grossing animated debut of all time, according to comScore estimates Sunday. The 2007 film “Shrek the Third” was the previous record-holder with a $121.6 million debut.

“Finding Dory,” which comes 13 years after “Finding Nemo” hit theaters, is also now the second-largest June opening of all time behind “Jurassic World.” The well-reviewed film features the voices of Ellen DeGeneres and Albert Brooks and played particular­ly well with audiences, who gave the film an A CinemaScor­e — Pixar’s 17th film in a row to receive the impressive grade.

Going into the weekend, analysts expected “Finding Dory” to do big, $100 million plus business, but never this much.

“The thought was ‘could this be the movie to eclipse “Toy Story 3’s” opening,’ not, ‘could it become the biggest animated opening of all time,’” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, comScore’s senior media analyst. “That’s the power of the Pixar brand.”

“Toy Story 3” was the biggest Pixar opening ever until now with $110.3 million.

Disney’s Executive Vice President of Distributi­on Dave Hollis was particular­ly heartened that the film did such robust late night business on both Friday and Saturday.

“That’s really a testament to this being a picture for everyone — not just for families,” Hollis said.

“Finding Dory” has the animated seas to itself until “The Secret Life of Pets” opens July 8.

The Kevin Hart and Dwayne Johnson buddy comedy “Central Intelligen­ce” also had a relatively muscular weekend, with a better-than-expected $34.5 million, putting it in second place.

“It’s a real home run,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros.’ executive vice president of domestic distributi­on. “These two comedians are just stars. They connect with their audience and each other in such a strong way. You just laugh when you watch them.”

“Central Intelligen­ce” cost a reported $50 million to make and scored especially well with younger audiences, who the studio hopes will propel the word of mouth in weeks to come. The next major comedy releases don’t come until midJuly with “Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates” and “Ghostbuste­rs.”

In third place, the James Wan horror pic “The Conjuring 2” fell 62 percent in its second weekend in theaters, earning $15.6 million and bringing its domestic total to $71.7 million.

Rounding out the top five were “Now You See Me 2,” with $9.7 million and “Warcraft,” with $6.5 million, both of which opened last weekend.

Overall, the weekend is down nearly 5 percent from last year, when “Inside Out” launched with $90.4 million and “Jurassic World” earned $106.6 million in its second weekend in theaters.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This image released by Disney shows the character Dory, voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, in a scene from “Finding Dory.” The Pixar sequel far-surpassed the already Oceansized expectatio­ns to take in $136.2 million, according to comScore estimates Sunday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This image released by Disney shows the character Dory, voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, in a scene from “Finding Dory.” The Pixar sequel far-surpassed the already Oceansized expectatio­ns to take in $136.2 million, according to comScore estimates Sunday.

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