Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Black Panther’ dominates ‘Wrinkle’

- By Brooks Barnes

LOS ANGELES — Oprah Winfrey pushing hard on the promotiona­l circuit. Pent-up demand for a PG-rated Disney film. The first movie in four years from a filmmaker heralded as a visionary. A production and marketing budget of at least $150 million.

A Wrinkle in Time (Disney), directed by Ava DuVernay, the first African-American woman at the helm of a big-budget studio film, and starring a diverse ensemble cast led by Winfrey, Mindy Kaling and Reese Witherspoo­n, had everything going for it. But, as often happens in Hollywood, the sum added up to less than its parts. A Wrinkle in Time arrived to a lackluster $33.3 million in ticket sales at 3,980 theaters in North America over the weekend.

That turnout placed it well behind Ryan Coogler’s Black Panther (Disney), which collected about $41.1 million in its fourth weekend, for a new domestic total of $562 million, according to comScore, which compiles box office data. After a sturdy debut in China over the weekend, Black Panther crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide, shattering a myth about the overseas viability of movies rooted in black culture.

To avoid going down as a misfire, A Wrinkle in Time — primarily aimed at children ages 8 to 14 — must attract large numbers of families in the coming weeks, when schools begin spring breaks. However, DuVernay’s movie, adapted from Madeleine L’Engle’s novel, received mostly weak reviews from critics and a B grade from ticket buyers in CinemaScor­e exit polls — results that typically do not translate to strong word-of-mouth.

A Wrinkle in Time collected an additional $6.3 million in limited release overseas (about 14 percent of the internatio­nal marketplac­e), according to Disney. It will roll out later in March in important markets like Britain, Mexico, Australia and Brazil.

For the weekend in North America, Strangers: Prey at Night (Aviron), a low-budget, R-rated horror movie, arrived in third place, collecting roughly $10.5 million. Two other new wide-release movies, The Hurricane Heist (Entertainm­ent Studios) and Gringo, an Amazonfina­nced movie that was distribute­d by STXfilms, were dead on arrival, collecting less than $3.2 million each, according to comScore.

Guillermo del Toro’s The Shape of Water (Fox Searchligh­t), which was named best picture at the 90th Academy Awards last weekend, expanded into 1,552 locations and received a solid Oscar bump, collecting $2.4 million, for a new domestic total of about $61 million. The Shape of Water, which won four Academy Awards in total, including one for del Toro’s directing, has now taken in $134 million worldwide.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Mari Copeny, third from left, watches a free screening of the film Black Panther on Feb. 19 with more than 150 children, after she raised $16,000 to provide free tickets in Flint Township, Mich. Now in its fourth weekend, Black Panther has made a domestic total of $562 million and has crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Mari Copeny, third from left, watches a free screening of the film Black Panther on Feb. 19 with more than 150 children, after she raised $16,000 to provide free tickets in Flint Township, Mich. Now in its fourth weekend, Black Panther has made a domestic total of $562 million and has crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States