Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘Jurassic World 2’ takes No. 1 again

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LOS ANGELES » The “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” dinosaurs ruled the box office for a second weekend in a row, but also left a little room for more modest newcomers like “Sicario: Day of the Soldado” and the basketball comedy “Uncle Drew” to over-perform in the crowded marketplac­e.

Studios on Sunday estimate that the blockbuste­r sequel to “Jurassic World” earned an additional $60 million in its second weekend in North American theaters, bringing its domestic total to $264.8 million. While its second weekend drop is about 10 percent steeper than that of the first film, worldwide, the film has grossed $932.4 million to date and is barreling toward the $1 billion mark.

The dinosaurs didn’t gobble up all the attention this weekend, however. “Incredible­s 2,” now in its third weekend in theaters, took second place with $45.5 million, bringing its domestic total to $439.7 million.

North American audiences came out in larger than expected numbers for both the action thriller “Sicario: Day of the Soldado” and “Uncle Drew.”

The “Sicario” sequel starring Josh Brolin and Benicio Del Toro earned $19 million to take third place. The film, distribute­d by Sony Pictures, cost a reported $35 to $40 million to produce.

Landing in fourth place was the basketball comedy “Uncle Drew,” which features NBA All-Stars Kyrie Irving and Shaquille O’Neal. With a production price tag under $20 million, the film exceeded expectatio­ns grossing $15.5 million and got audience stamp of approval with an A CinemaScor­e.

The ad and marketing campaign included spots during the NBA playoffs and finals, a Wheaties box featuring Irving as Uncle Drew, and an Uncle Drew capsule collection from Nike.

Lionsgate, which distribute­d the movie, knew the film had built-in marketabil­ity because of the celebrity of the stars, but was also pleased to discover that the film in early screenings appealed to non-basketball fans too.

“That was the surprise, that wow, we have a picture that really plays to a general audience,” said David Spitz, Lionsgate’s president of domestic distributi­on. “It has a really sweet message.”

The A CinemaScor­e, which suggests that the film will have good word-ofmouth buzz, could bode well for the film over the Fourth of July holiday and into the rest of the summer.

“We’re hoping it’s the old adage, ‘It’s not a sprint, it’s a marathon,’” Spitz said.

Lower down on the charts the Indian film “Sanju,” a biopic about Bollywood star Sanjay Dutt, earned an impressive $2.6 million from only 356 screens in its opening weekend. And the Fred Rogers documentar­y “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” now playing on 654 screens, continues to do well in its expansion. It added $2.3 million to its earnings this weekend.

After two weekends of $100 million plus movies, this past weekend provided a little blockbuste­r break before “Ant-Man and the Wasp” opens this week. But even without a recordbrea­ker or a $100 million movie, the box office is still up 15.3 percent from last summer’s abysmal performanc­e and 9.3 percent for the year overall.

“We can’t have every weekend like the last two weekends,” said comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian.

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