Calgary Herald

IT’S A FACEPLANT FOR THE FALL GUY

- MARK DANIELL mdaniell@postmedia.com

A sequel to The Fall Guy has already been written, but it’s unlikely that it will ever get made after the film flopped at the box office last weekend, opening below expectatio­ns with US$28.5 million. In an interview with Fast Company, star Ryan Gosling said he hopes to keep telling the story of his character Colt Seavers, a stuntman who is hired to track down the missing actor who is the star of his ex-girlfriend’s (Emily Blunt) directoria­l debut.

“The sequel sort of wrote itself,” Gosling told the outlet. “We already know (the story) intimately. We’re just hoping that people like this movie enough that we get to keep telling the story of these characters. We love them so much, and we love this world, and I feel confident that we can do it.”

He added, “These days everyone always hopes their movie can become a franchise.”

But Gosling’s ode to stunt performers underperfo­rmed at the box office, effectivel­y dashing his hopes for a sequel.

The Universal Pictures film kicked off summer movie-going on the May weekend that Marvel has dominated with $100-million-plus launches for over a decade. (On the same weekend in 2023, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 debuted with $118 million.) But last year’s strikes delayed Deadpool & Wolverine, which was originally slated to open on the first Friday in May. Going into the weekend, early forecasts had The Fall Guy opening in the range of $30 million to $40 million.

The action-comedy now faces a steep uphill battle to recoup its $130-million production budget.

“We love these characters so much that we wanted to know, just for ourselves, what happens to Colt and (Blunt’s character) Jody after the movie ends?” Gosling told Fast Company. “What’s the next phase for them? And we know exactly what it is. So hopefully the audience wants to know, too.”

Still, Jim Orr, distributi­on chief for Universal, remains bullish on the film despite its lacklustre first weekend results.

“We had a very solid opening,” Orr told The Associated Press. “We’re looking forward to a very long, very robust, very successful run throughout the domestic box office for literally weeks if not months to come.”

But despite featuring two of the stars of last summer’s Barbenheim­er phenomenon (Gosling starred in Barbie and Blunt appeared in Oppenheime­r), The Fall Guy’s faceplant likely means the film will be one-and-done. Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes just opened in theatres Friday and a new Mad Max movie, Furiosa, is out later this month.

“Universal spent money with The Fall Guy like they were delivering Barbenheim­er 2.0. But in reality what they got was a sequel to (the Sandra Bullock-channing Tatum adventure comedy) The Lost City,” Jeff Bock, a senior box office analyst with Exhibitor Relations, tells Postmedia. “It’s a tall task to open the summer season in Hollywood and The Fall Guy fell noticeably short. Unfortunat­ely, in real life, there is no second take. You get one shot at an opening weekend. Now Universal will have to pray (the film has) legs.”

“Given the high-profile cast and its position as the kickoff film of the summer season, high expectatio­ns were placed on The Fall Guy, so its debut has been seen as a disappoint­ment,” says Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for Comscore. But he thinks there’s still a chance the film can build some momentum over time.

“For most audiences this was seen as an original film and not based on massively known IP, particular­ly among younger moviegoers. So it will take some time for word of mouth and buzz to kick in,” Dergarabed­ian says.

Ironically, during the press cycle for The Fall Guy, Gosling was asked why his 2016 action-comedy The Nice Guys also fell short of expectatio­ns and didn’t land a followup.

“So much of a sequel, I think, is decided by the opening weekend of a movie, and we opened up against Angry Birds,” Gosling told Comicbook.com. “So Angry Birds just, just destroyed us. Angry Birds got a sequel.”

The Nice Guys also faced competitio­n on its opening weekend from Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising and Captain America: Civil War.

At the end of its box office run, The Nice Guys, which co-starred Russell Crowe, managed to gross an estimated $62 million on a $50-million budget.

Universal spent money with

The Fall Guy like they were delivering Barbenheim­er 2.0.

JEFF BOCK, box office analyst

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Ryan Gosling plays a stuntman in the action comedy The Fall Guy, which, despite a big budget and advance publicity, failed to generate much interest from the public in its opening weekend.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Ryan Gosling plays a stuntman in the action comedy The Fall Guy, which, despite a big budget and advance publicity, failed to generate much interest from the public in its opening weekend.

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