Los Angeles Times

It’s hard to believe, but ‘Rampage’ almost upset

Another strong week for ‘A Quiet Place’ is nearly good enough to top new action flick.

- By Jen Yamato jen.yamato@latimes.com Twitter: @jenyamato

Dwayne Johnson and his gorilla buddy George might have scored the box-office crown with a $34.5 million take for the city-smashing action flick “Rampage” — but the weekend’s real winner knew how to speak softly and carry a big second weekend.

Falling shy of pre-release projection­s that pegged the $120-million-budgeted “Rampage” for an opening of $35 million to $45 million, the Warner Bros. and New Line release arrived in theaters with just enough of a box-office bang to eke out a No. 1 opening over previous weekend winner “A Quiet Place.”

Global audiences smelled what Johnson was cooking last December when he helped lead Sony Pictures’ positively reviewed “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” to a colossal $950million worldwide box office.

But “Rampage,” in which he plays a primatolog­ist trying to save the world and his primate BFF from a nefarious scientific experiment gone haywire, split critics down the middle with a 50% Rotten Tomatoes score even as audiences gave it an ACinemaSco­re rating.

The Brad Peyton-directed action adventure took $114.1 million internatio­nally in its worldwide debut for a $148.6 total and will have to lean heavily on Johnson’s star power to keep a momentum that can offset the pricey budget.

Impressive­ly, less than $2 million in ticket sales stood in the way of a “Quiet Place” upset by director-star John Krasinski, whose critically acclaimed tale about a family living in silence to hide from monsters came in at second with $32.6 million. That’s a modest 35% decline from its surprising­ly potent debut the previous weekend.

The tense genre film also stars Emily Blunt, Noah Jupe and Millicent Simmonds and is on the verge of breaking $100 million domestical­ly with a worldwide total of $151.3 million after 10 days in theaters.

The success of an inventive horror concept like “A Quiet Place” coincides with the more low-hanging frights of Universal’s “Truth or Dare,” which landed a BCinemaSco­re but an anemic 15% on Rotten Tomatoes.

Making the most of a gruesome plot inspired by the real-life game and tweencatni­p stars Lucy Hale and Tyler Posey, the critically panned PG-13 outing took in $19.1 million over the Friday the 13th weekend. Even so, made within the low-budget Blumhouse Production­s model, that’s still a recipe for success.

Fourth place went to Steven Spielberg’s pixelparty nostalgia-fest “Ready Player One,” which fell a hefty 54% from last weekend but added $11.2 million to its coins for a total of $114.6 million domestic.

The Kay Cannon-directed “Blockers” came in fifth, slipping a steep 50% to add an additional $10.3 million to its $36.92 million domestic tally. Universal’s Rrated comedy starring John Cena, Leslie Mann, Ike Barinholtz, Geraldine Viswanatha­n, Kathryn Newton and Gideon Adlon has notched $52.9 million worldwide to date.

Wes Anderson’s stop-motion outing “Isle of Dogs” went ambitiousl­y wide but made just $5 million from 1,939 locations. The Fox Searchligh­t release added 1,385 locations from last week but saw a weekend box office bump of only 10%.

Three weeks ago, “Dogs” opened in limited release to the best per-screen average of the year but also faced criticisms of cultural appropriat­ion, largely from the Asian American community.

Elsewhere in canine cinema, upstart distributo­r Fun Academy unleashed the animated title “Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero” — and added an A CinemaScor­e to a robust 90% Rotten Tomatoes rating — also in wide release, but weekend grosses barely cracked $1 million.

Slipping into 755 theaters for a $1.65-million take was Bleecker Street’s R-rated Jon Hamm starrer “Beirut,” a CIA spy film directed by “The Machinist’s” Brad Anderson. Written and produced by Tony Gilroy, the film scored 78% on Rotten Tomatoes. It also stars Rosamund Pike.

The specialty release of note this week is Sony Pictures Classics’ “The Rider.” The award-winning drama from director Chloé Zhao stars Brady Jandreau as a former rodeo star redefining his sense of self after a devastatin­g riding accident. It’s sitting pretty at 96% on Rotten Tomatoes.

After premiering at Cannes, where it won the Directors’ Fortnight Art Cinema Award, the film opened to $45,268 from three theaters and solidifies Zhao as a rising director to watch.

Next weekend’s wide releases include STX Entertainm­ent’s Amy Schumer vehicle “I Feel Pretty,” Fox Searchligh­t’s comedy sequel “Super Troopers 2” and Lionsgate and Codeblack’s thriller “Traffik.”

 ?? Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent Inc. ?? DWAYNE JOHNSON as Davis Okoye, Jason Liles doing motion-capture role as gorilla George in “Rampage.”
Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent Inc. DWAYNE JOHNSON as Davis Okoye, Jason Liles doing motion-capture role as gorilla George in “Rampage.”
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 ?? Jonny Cournoyer Paramount Pictures ?? DIRECTOR, writer and co-star John Krasinski, left, with Noah Jupe in the horror film “A Quiet Place.”
Jonny Cournoyer Paramount Pictures DIRECTOR, writer and co-star John Krasinski, left, with Noah Jupe in the horror film “A Quiet Place.”

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