Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Halloween’ scares up $77.5M in ticket sales

- By Lindsey Bahr

LOS ANGELES — Forty years after he first appeared in theaters, Michael Myers is still drawing huge audiences for a good scare. Universal Pictures said Sunday that Halloween took in an estimated $77.5 million in ticket sales from North American theaters.

It captured first place at the box office with the second-highest horror opening of all time, behind last year’s It.

It also marked the second highest October opening ever behind Venom’s $80.3 million launch earlier this month.

The studio also says it’s the biggest movie opening ever with a female lead over 55, in star Jamie Lee Curtis.

David Gordon Green directed Halloween, which brings back Curtis as Laurie Strode and Nick Castle as Michael Myers and essentiall­y ignores the events of the other sequels and spinoffs aside from John Carpenter’s original.

Reviews have been largely positive for the new installmen­t, with an 80 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a B+ Cinema Score from audiences that were mostly older (59 percent over 25) and male (53 percent). Internatio­nally, Halloween earned $14.3 million from 23 markets.

Blumhouse, the shop behind Get Out and numerous other modestly budgeted horror films, co-produced Halloween with Miramax. It cost only $10 million to make.

“You take the nostalgia for Halloween, especially with the return of Jamie Lee Curtis, and you combine that with the Blumhouse brand and its contempora­ry currency in the genre and it just made for a ridiculous­ly potent combinatio­n at the box office this weekend,” said Jim Orr, Universal’s president of domestic distributi­on.

With 10 days to go until the holiday, including another weekend, the studio expects Halloween to enjoy a much longer life than typical horror films that usually drop off significan­tly after the first weekend.

Halloween was enough to bump the comic-book film Venom out of the No. 1 spot and into third place. In its third weekend in theaters, it collected $18.1 million, bringing its domestic total to $171.1 million.

Meanwhile A Star Is Born held on to second place in its third weekend with $19.3 million. The Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga drama has grossed $126.4 million from North American theaters and is cruising to break $200 million worldwide Sunday. Damien Chazelle’s Neil Armstrong biopic

First Man tumbled to fifth place in its second weekend earning $8.6 million, down 46 percent from its launch.

 ?? RYAN GREEN/UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIA AP ?? Jamie Lee Curtis in a scene from Halloween.
RYAN GREEN/UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIA AP Jamie Lee Curtis in a scene from Halloween.

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