Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Lion King’ reigns above box office for second week

- By Andrew Dalton

LOS ANGELES — The Lion King rode its circle of life into a second weekend atop the box office and Once Upon A Time … In Hollywood, while not quite doing fairy tale numbers, gave director Quentin Tarantino his biggest opening ever.

Disney’s photoreali­stic remake of the Hamlet-themed tale of Mufasa, Simba and Nala, featuring the voices of Donald Glover and Beyoncé, brought in $75 million in North America, according to studio estimates Sunday. Its domestic total of $350 million makes it the year’s fourth highest-grossing film after just 10 days of release.

Once Upon A Time … In Hollywood finished a distant second with $40 million in its opening weekend for Sony, but it bested the 2009 opening of Tarantino’s Inglouriou­s Basterds by some $2 million and made a strong showing for an R-rated, nearly three-hour film that was not a sequel or remake and was aimed solely at adults.

The film with Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie as denizens of a 1969 Los Angeles where old Hollywood was fading and the Manson family was rising was more star-powered than Tarantino’s previous eight movies, though the director himself was as big a draw as anyone.

“In our fan survey, over 40 percent of the audience went to see the movie because of the director,” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for Comscore. “That’s incredible. You almost never see that. Sony did a great job of putting that cast and certainly Tarantino at the front of the marketing. That collective star power just paid huge dividends.”

It’s also the sort of film that’s unlikely to experience a major drop-off in the coming weeks, and its long legs could walk it into awards season given Hollywood’s persistent love for movies about itself.

But with all of that, the film’s opening take was still nearly doubled by The Lion King.

“Lion King has appealed to everyone; that’s a second-weekend gross that would be the envy of most films on their opening weekend,” Dergarabed­ian said.

The two-week take is also a sign that audiences are not yet feeling fatigue for Disney’s liveaction remakes in a year that has already seen Dumbo and Aladdin.

“The idea that remake burnout would be in effect for The Lion King has not proven true,” Dergarabed­ian said. “Some brands are inoculated from that kind of negative speculatio­n.”

That’s even more good news for the ever-dominant Disney, with a live-action Mulan slated for early next year and more remakes in the planning stages.

The rest of the box office top 10 remained essentiall­y unchanged from a week earlier. Sony’s Spider-Man: Far From Home was third with $12.2 million in its fourth weekend and has earned a cumulative $344 million. Toy Story 4 was fourth with $9.8 million, and Crawl fifth with $4 million.

The Lion King could reign for a third week. With major summer releases slowing as fall approaches, the only real competitio­n it has opening next weekend is Fast & Furious: Hobbs & Shaw.

 ?? DISNEY VIA AP ?? From left, Mufasa, voiced by James Earl Jones, and young Simba, voiced by JD McCrary, in The Lion King.
DISNEY VIA AP From left, Mufasa, voiced by James Earl Jones, and young Simba, voiced by JD McCrary, in The Lion King.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States