The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

‘Black Panther,’ 4 weeks in, tops ‘Wrinkle in Time’

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LOS ANGELES — T’Challa still rules the box office four weeks in, even with the fresh rivalry of another Walt Disney Studios release in “A Wrinkle in Time.”

“Black Panther” took the No. 1 spot at the North American box office with $41.1 million according to studio estimates Sunday, leaving another newcomer in its wake. The Marvel and Disney phenomenon crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide this weekend and became the seventh-highest grossing domestic release with $562 million. Not accounting for inflation, it’s now passed “The Dark Knight.”

With a marketplac­e still dominated by “Black Panther,” Disney faced some stiff competitio­n from its own studio in launching Ava DuVernay’s adaption of “A Wrinkle in Time,” which opened in second place with $33.3 million from 3,980 locations. The PG-rated film, which cost around $103 million to produce and stars Oprah Winfrey and Reese Witherspoo­n, received mixed reviews from critics (it’s currently at a “rotten” 44 percent on Rotten-Tomatoes) and audiences who gave it a B Cinema-Score.

In gauging “A Wrinkle in Time’s” longterm prospects, a somewhat similar comparison could be Disney’s “Tomorrowla­nd,” a PG-rated sci-fi pic with middling reviews and a B CinemaScor­e which opened to $33 million in the early summer of 2015 and went on to gross $93 million domestical­ly. “Tomorrowla­nd,” however, notably cost nearly twice as much to make as “A Wrinkle in Time.”

But the “Black Panther” effect is the x-factor here. For Disney, it’s a “win all around.”

“When you think about having two films at the top of the box office, it’s definitely a win all around,” says Disney’s worldwide theatrical distributi­on president Dave Hollis. “We’re feeling good about this start … We’re feeling good about what, for us, is a little family competitio­n between now and (the Easter holiday).”

Hollis says he doesn’t think the studio would have done anything differentl­y regarding “Wrinkle’s” release had they known the scope and longevity of “Black Panther’s” prospects.

“There’s always going to be competitio­n in the marketplac­e,” he says. “With a tentpole strategy like ours, four weeks of separation is about what we can expect.”

Still, “Black Panther” has devoured the marketplac­e for a month straight now, leaving all other newcomers in the dust.

The new horror film “The Strangers: Prey At Night,” with Christina Hendricks, took third place with $10.5 million. The Jennifer Lawrence thriller “Red Sparrow” landed in fourth in its second weekend with $8.2 million and the comedy “Game Night” placed fifth with $7.9 million in weekend three.

Hardly any of the new releases, which also included the thriller “The Hurricane Heist” (8th place, $3.2 million) and the dark action comedy “Gringo,” (11th place, $2.6 million) were well-reviewed going into the weekend, save for the limited release independen­ts like “Thoroughbr­eds,” which made $1.2 million from 549 locations, and Armando Iannucci’s “The Death of Stalin,” which opened in four theaters to $181,000.

It also left room for the Academy Award best picture winner “The Shape of Water,” which is also available on home video, to capitalize on its post Oscars stature. The Fox Searchligh­t film added 720 theaters and took in in $2.4 million from 1,552 locations, bringing its domestic total to $61 million.

 ?? Atsushi Nishijima / Associated Press ?? Storm Reid, from left, Deric McCabe and Reese Witherspoo­n in a scene from “A Wrinkle In Time.”
Atsushi Nishijima / Associated Press Storm Reid, from left, Deric McCabe and Reese Witherspoo­n in a scene from “A Wrinkle In Time.”

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