Ridgway Record

'Elvis,' 'Top Gun' tie for box-office crown with $30.5M each

- By Jake Coyle AP Film Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Baz Luhrmann's Elvis Presley biopic "Elvis" shook up theaters with an estimated $30.5 million in weekend ticket sales, but — in a box-office rarity — "Elvis" tied "Top Gun: Maverick," which also reported $30.5 million, for No. 1 in theaters.

Final figures Monday, once Sunday's grosses are tabulated, will sort out which film ultimately won the weekend. With a high degree of accuracy, studios can forecast Sunday sales based on Friday and Saturday business, though numbers often shift by a few hundred thousand dollars.

"Elvis," starring newcomer Austin Butler as Presley, came into the weekend with expectatio­ns closer to $25 million. Among recent music biopics, a $30.5 million debut puts the King ahead of the pace of Elton John ("Rocketman" launched with $25.7 million in 2019) though not in the same class as Freddie Mercury ("Bohemian Rhapsody" opened with $51.1 million in 2018).

About 60% of the audience for "Elvis" was over the age of 35. Older audiences have been among the most hesitant to return to theaters in the pandemic but that's changing — in part, Goldstein noted, because of "Top Gun," which brought back fans of the 1986 original.

"Elvis," which cost about $85 million to make, was propelled by strong reviews (78% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes), good word of mouth (an A- CinemaScor­e) and a glitzy Cannes Film Festival premiere. It added $20 million overseas over the weekend.

Meanwhile, "Top Gun: Maverick" continues to soar. The Paramount Pictures film became the first 2022 release to reach $1 billion in worldwide ticket sales, and the first starring Tom Cruise to do so.

The "Elvis"/"Top

Gun" showdown — along with the new Blumhouse horror release "The Black Phone" and big holdovers in "Jurassic World: Dominion" and Pixar's "Lightyear" — made for one of the most competitiv­e, and busy, weekends in movie theaters in the pandemic era.

Most studios came away celebratin­g, though Disney's "Lightyear" dropped a steep 65% in its second weekend. After opening softly last week, the "Toy Story" spinoff grossed $17.7 million domestical­ly, falling to fifth place. "Lightyear," which has made $152 million worldwide to date, will soon face more competitio­n for families with the Friday release of "Minions: The Rise of Gru."

Counterpro­gramming came from Universal Pictures' "The Black Phone," the Scott Derrickson-directed supernatur­al thriller starring Ethan Hawke as an escaped killer. The Blumhouse production rode strong reviews (84% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) to a better-than-expected launch of $23.4 million.

After two weeks in first place, Universal's "Jurassic World: Dominion" took in $26.4 million, sliding to third. It's now passed $300 million domestiThe

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