Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘A Quiet Place,’ ‘Rampage’ lead newcomers at box office

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LOS ANGELES » It’s another weekend of buzz versus pure star power at the box office as the word of mouth sensation “A Quiet Place” finds itself neck-and-neck again with Dwayne Johnson’s “Rampage.” This time buzz had the slight advantage.

Studio estimates on Sunday have placed “A Quiet Place,” with $22 million, in first, and “Rampage” in second with $21 million, but it’s possible those numbers may shift when final results are tallied on Monday.

Still, John Krasinski’s “A Quiet Place” continues to be a mini phenomenon. With a $17 million production budget, “A Quiet Place” has grossed $132.4 million from North American theaters in three weeks. “Rampage,” too, is down only 41 percent domestical­ly in its second weekend and continues to rake in the dollars globally. The film boasts a worldwide tally of $283 million, and Johnson has continued using his social media accounts to hype the film and thank audiences.

“I never take success like this for granted. Global success like this means so much,” Johnson posted on his Instagram account Saturday night. “I’m not a Marvel movie. It’s not Star Wars. ‘Rampage’ may as well have been called ‘Dwayne Johnson and his albino gorilla friend’ because it’s such an obscure video game ... Thank you guys so much.”

The staying power of both somewhat overshadow­ed the newcomers, like Amy Schumer’s “I Feel Pretty” and the sequel to the 2001 cult comedy “Super Troopers,” both of which neverthele­ss managed to find their own niche audiences despite largely negative reviews.

“I Feel Pretty,” released by STX Entertainm­ent, grossed an estimated $16.2 million — a little less than half of what Schumer’s “Trainwreck” opened to in July 2015. Unlike “Trainwreck,” Schumer did not write “I Feel Pretty,” which is about

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