USA TODAY US Edition

‘Black Panther’ leaps into theaters

It rakes in $192M. There were other films, too.

- Kim Willis Contributi­ng: Brian Truitt and The Associated Press

Black Panther delivered on the hype at the box office.

The high-profile black superhero movie starring Chadwick Boseman bypassed early expectatio­ns and raked in

$192 million in ticket sales for the weekend, according to studio estimates and comScore. Including Monday’s Presidents Day holiday, the film is expected to earn $218 million for the four-day weekend and $361 million worldwide.

Black Panther had fifth-biggest opening weekend ever, not accounting for inflation.

The film set a new record for a February opening, besting Deadpool, which started with $132.4 million and

$152.2million for the same three- and four-day weekend in 2016.

It’s Marvel’s second-best North American opening, comScore says, behind only The Avengers in 2012

($207.4 million).

The Ryan Coogler movie has earned terrific reviews. It received a 97% fresh rating from Rotten Tomatoes and an A-plus from audiences on CinemaScor­e.

Anticipati­on was huge for the comicbook adaptation, which is the first Marvel film to star a predominan­tly black cast (including Boseman as T’Challa/ Black Panther, Michael B. Jordan, Lupita Nyong’o and Letitia Wright) and be helmed by black filmmakers.

“I wouldn’t underestim­ate Black

Panther in any way,” Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for comScore, told USA TODAY before the movie opened. “The more important currency to this movie — as was with

Wonder Woman — is not the dollars and cents, although that will be substantia­l, but the impact on the zeitgeist.”

The film attracted a diverse audience: comScore/Screen Engine’s PostTrak audience survey found that moviegoers were 37% African American, 35% Caucasian, 18% Hispanic, 5% Asian and 5% other ethnicitie­s.

Peter Rabbit, the live-action adaptation of Beatrix Potter’s books starring James Corden as Peter and Domhnall Gleeson as Mr. McGregor, finished a dis- tant second with $17.3 million in its second weekend. Fifty Shades Freed, the final film in the sex saga with Jamie Dornan and Dakota Johnson, slid to third with $16.9 million. Rounding out the top five: Jumanji:

Welcome to the Jungle, which added another $7.9 million for an astonishin­g

$377.6 million in nine weeks, and Clint Eastwood’s The 15:17 to Paris, starring the real-life heroes who thwarted the

2015 terrorist attack, with $7.7 million for fifth place.

Among the weekend’s other new releases, prehistori­c family film Early Man took in $3.2 million. The animated film features the voices of Eddie Redmayne, Tom Hiddleston and Maisie Williams.

The biblical epic Samson, featuring Taylor James in the title role, earned

$1.97 million.

Final figures are expected Tuesday.

 ?? DISNEY/MARVEL STUDIOS ?? With “Black Panther,” Chadwick Boseman rules Wakanda and the box office.
DISNEY/MARVEL STUDIOS With “Black Panther,” Chadwick Boseman rules Wakanda and the box office.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States