The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘CAPTAIN MARVEL’ HAS BIG OPENING WEEKEND

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Like its titular heroine, Disney’s “Captain Marvel” is defying all expectatio­ns.

The highly anticipate­d film debuted well above analyst prediction­s of $125 million, with $153 million in North America, according to estimates from measuremen­t firm Comscore. Well behind in second place over the weekend was Universal’s “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World,” which added $14.7 million in its third weekend. In third, Lionsgate’s “A Madea Family Funeral” added $12.1 million in its second weekend (a 55 percent drop).

“Captain Marvel” scored the biggest opening weekend of 2019 by a landslide and the first over $100 million. Usually, it takes more superheroe­s to assemble on-screen to achieve that result. Only “Black Panther,” “Avengers: Infinity War,” “Captain America: Civil War,” “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” “Iron Man 3” and “Marvel’s the Avengers” have performed better among Marvel Cinematic Universe films in their opening weekends.

“We couldn’t be more excited for the results,” said Disney’s distributi­on chief, Cathleen Taff. “The global box office has been a wonderful thing to wake up to this morning.”

The movie, which cost more than $175 million to make, stars Brie Larson as a Kree noble warrior hero tasked with saving the planet from an influx of invading Skrulls. Over the course of the journey, she awakens to her powers and to the Earth identity she’s forgotten.

“I think from a casting perspectiv­e, Brie completely embodies this narrative ‘Captain Marvel,’” said Taff. “The lead-up in ‘Infinity War’ before anyone’s ever seen her to now, her origin story, to (the upcoming) ‘Avengers: Endgame,’ where you’ll see what she can really do, is something that fans crave and want to see.”

The 21st film in the MCU, it is also the first Marvel picture with a solo female lead. Much like “Black Panther,” it comes at a time when moviegoers are clamoring for more diverse storytelli­ng.

“Kevin Feige and the creative team at Marvel Studios have continued to push the envelope and recognize that the audiences around the world are from diverse experience­s and perspectiv­es,” said Taff. “The great thing about the stories they tell is that anyone from anywhere can be a superhero and those are all things that are celebrated.”

Rounding out the top five in fourth place, Warner Bros.’ “The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part” added $3.8 million, and at No.5, Fox’s “Alita: Battle Angel” added $3.2 million.

The top 10 also included Universal’s Oscar-winning “Green Book” with $2.5 million, Warner Bros.’ “Isn’t It Romantic” ($2.4 million), MGM’s “Fighting With My Family” ($2.2 million), Focus Features’ “Greta” ($2.2 million) and Neon’s documentar­y “Apollo 11” ($1.3 million), which expanded to 405 screens after a one-week exclusive IMAX run.

In limited release, A24 opened “Gloria Bell,” starring Julianne Moore, in five locations with $154,775, a strong per-screen average of $30,955. The film earned a 98 percent “fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Opening this weekend, but not expected to challenge “Captain Marvel” for No.1, are Paramount’s animated “Wonder Park,” Lionsgate’s teen romance “Five Feet Apart” and the sci-fi thriller “Captive State” from Focus Features.

 ?? CHUCK ZLOTNICK/MARVEL STUDIOS/WALT DISNEY STUDIOS ?? Brie Larson stars in “Captain Marvel.”
CHUCK ZLOTNICK/MARVEL STUDIOS/WALT DISNEY STUDIOS Brie Larson stars in “Captain Marvel.”

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