The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

‘Kong’ outmuscles ‘Logan’ to become king

- By Lindsey Bahr AP Film Writer

LOS ANGELES >> It was a battle of the beasts at the box office this weekend, and King Kong emerged as the definitive victor over Wolverine.

According to studio estimates Sunday, “Kong: Skull Island” amassed $61 million in its first weekend in theaters, surpassing expectatio­ns and easily beating out “Logan,” which is now in its second weekend.

Warner Bros. and Legendary’s “Kong: Skull Island” stars Tom Hiddleston, Brie Larson and Samuel L. Jackson. It’s the second in the planned “monster universe” following the latest “Godzilla,” which grossed $529.1 million worldwide in 2014.

Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros.’ head of domestic distributi­on, said the weekend “far exceeded everyone’s expectatio­ns,” and he predicts Monday actuals might come in higher than the estimated $61 million. The film, which earned a B CinemaScor­e overall, was graded stronger by younger audiences, many of whom will have extra days off soon for spring break.

“The world of mouth is really kicking in,” Goldstein said.

Costing a reported $185 million to produce, “Kong” still has work to be done, however, to reach profitabil­ity, and much of that will depend on internatio­nal earnings. This weekend it topped internatio­nal charts as well with $81.6 million from 66 territorie­s.

“They had a solid weekend. But they’re going to be looking for a half-billion worldwide to make it a certifiabl­e hit,” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for box office tracker comScore.

Fox’s “Logan” took second place, down around 58 percent from its first weekend with $37.9 million. The R-rated pic, which sees Hugh Jackman reprising his role as the X-Men character Wolverine, has earned $152.7 million in total.

In third place, “Get Out,” the buzzy horror film directed by Jordan Peele, added $21.1 million, pushing its sum to $111 million in just three weeks.

With a price tag of only $4.5 million, the movie is a certifiabl­e hit for Blumhouse and Universal and continues to remain prominentl­y in the conversati­on up against films with much larger production and marketing budgets behind them.

Rounding out the top five were the faith-based movie “The Shack,” with $10.1 million, and “The Lego Batman Movie” with $7.8 million.

The strong weekend nudged the year to date out of the

red, too, and even at this early date, Dergarabed­ian thinks the box office might be headed for yet another record year based on the number of releases.

Next week shows no sign of slowing, either, with Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” poised to earn well over $100 million out of the gate.

“It’s a March of beasts for sure,” said Dergarabed­ian.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows a scene from “Kong: Skull Island.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows a scene from “Kong: Skull Island.”

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