Daily Times (Primos, PA)

‘Black Panther,’ 4 weeks in, tops ‘A Wrinkle in Time’

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LOS ANGELES » T’Challa still rules the box office four weeks in, even with the fresh rivalry of another Walt Disney Studios release in “A Wrinkle in Time.”

“Black Panther” took the No. 1 spot at the North American box office with $41.1 million according to studio estimates Sunday, leaving another newcomer in its wake. The Marvel and Disney phenomenon crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide this weekend and became the 7th highest grossing domestic release with $562 million. Not accounting for inflation, it’s now passed “The Dark Knight.”

With a marketplac­e still dominated by “Black Panther,” Disney faced some stiff competitio­n from its own studio in launching Ava DuVernay’s adaption of “A Wrinkle in Time,” which opened in second place with $33.3 million from 3,980 locations. The PG-rated film, which cost around $103 million to produce and stars Oprah Winfrey and Reese Witherspoo­n, received mixed reviews from critics (it’s currently at a “rotten” 44 percent on RottenToma­toes) and audiences who gave it a B CinemaScor­e.

In gauging “A Wrinkle in Time’s” long-term prospects, a somewhat similar comparison could be Disney’s “Tomorrowla­nd,” a PG-rated sci-fi pic with middling reviews and a B CinemaScor­e which opened to $33 million in the early summer of 2015 and went on to gross $93 million domestical­ly. “Tomorrowla­nd,” however, notably cost nearly twice as much to make as “A Wrinkle in Time.”

But the “Black Panther” effect is the x-factor here. For Disney, it’s a “win all around.”

“When you think about having two films at the top of the box office, it’s definitely a win all around,” says Disney’s worldwide theatrical distributi­on president Dave Hollis. “We’re feeling good about this start ... We’re feeling good about what, for us, is a little family competitio­n between now and (the Easter holiday).”

Hollis says he doesn’t think the studio would have done anything differentl­y regarding “Wrinkle’s” release had they known the scope and longevity of “Black Panther’s” prospects.

“There’s always going to be competitio­n in the marketplac­e,” he says. “With a tentpole strategy like ours, four weeks of separation is about what we can expect.”

Still, “Black Panther” has devoured the marketplac­e for a month straight now, leaving all other newcomers in the dust.

The new horror film “The Strangers: Prey At Night,” with Christina Hendricks, took third place with $10.5 million. The Jennifer Lawrence thriller “Red Sparrow” landed in fourth in its second weekend with $8.2 million and the comedy “Game Night” placed fifth with $7.9 million in weekend three.

Hardly any of the new releases, which also included the thriller “The Hurricane Heist” (8th place, $3.2 million) and the dark action comedy “Gringo,” (11th place, $2.6 million) were well-reviewed going into the weekend, save for the limited release independen­ts like “Thoroughbr­eds,” which made $1.2 million from 549 locations, and Armando Iannucci’s “The Death of Stalin,” which opened in four theaters to $181,000.

 ?? ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA — DISNEY VIA AP ?? This image released by Disney shows Storm Reid, from left, Deric McCabe and Reese Witherspoo­n in a scene from “A Wrinkle In Time.”
ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA — DISNEY VIA AP This image released by Disney shows Storm Reid, from left, Deric McCabe and Reese Witherspoo­n in a scene from “A Wrinkle In Time.”

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