Montreal Gazette

The Upside tops Aquaman at the weekend box office

Hart and Cranston comedy unseats Aquaman with $19.6M opening

- JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK Kevin Hart isn’t hosting the Oscars, but he’s got a No. 1 movie. The Upside, starring Hart and Bryan Cranston, surpassed expectatio­ns to open with $19.6 million in ticket sales, according to studio estimates Sunday.

The strong performanc­e of The Upside pushed Aquaman to second after the aquatic superhero’s three-week reign atop the North American box office. Warner Bros.’ Aquaman still passed $1 billion worldwide over the weekend, becoming the first DC Comics release to reach that mark since 2012’s The Dark Knight Rises.

The Upside opened on the heels of several weeks of Oscar drama surroundin­g Hart. The comedian last month withdrew from hosting the Academy Awards , just days after being named MC, when he initially refused to apologize for years-old homophobic tweets.

On the publicity trail for The Upside, Hart repeatedly dismissed the Oscar controvers­y, saying he was “over it,” while flirting with the possibilit­y of returning as Oscar host.

Whether all that attention helped raise the profile of The Upside, a remake of the 2011 French comedy The Intouchabl­es, was difficult to extrapolat­e, though it surely didn’t hurt. Ticket sales were almost twice industry forecasts. The film received poor reviews (40 per cent fresh on Rotten Tomatoes), and was slammed by some critics for trading on the kind of gay panic humour Hart apologized for.

Cranston was also a target of criticism from those who said the role should have gone to an actor with a disability.

Neil Burger’s film, which cost about $35 million to make, stars Hart as an ex-con who becomes a caretaker for a physically disabled author (Cranston). It was originally to be distribute­d by the Weinstein Co. Harvey Weinstein debuted the film at the 2017 Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival just weeks before the many allegation­s of sexual harassment surfaced against the movie mogul.

STX Entertainm­ent picked up the movie, which on Sunday handed the five-year-old startup studio its first No. 1 release at the box office. Launched in 2014 with a mission to make the kind of mid-budgeted, star-driven films the studios have increasing­ly abandoned, STX has had some successes (Bad Moms, The Foreigner, the critically acclaimed The Edge of Seventeen), but has often struggled to find breakout hits.

STX’s Motion Picture Group chairman Adam Fogelson pointed to audience reaction (an A Cinema-Score), and downplayed any effect of the Oscar chatter on The Upside, noting that Hart “is in the culture constantly for tons of stuff.”

Fogelson called the No. 1 result a symbol of larger success for STX’s business model.

“We have been profitable on the overwhelmi­ng majority of our movies for more than a year and a half. No one needs to cry for us, but I don’t think the company gets credit for that because the way we’re doing that is so different from how traditiona­l Hollywood has operated,” said Fogelson. “This result is just an exclamatio­n point on the fact that this can work not just in an STX way but in an old Hollywood way, as well.”

Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for Comscore, credited STX with accurately reading the marketplac­e. The studio worked with the filmmakers to recut The Upside from an R-rated version to make a more broadly appealing PG-13 one.

“It’s not for the faint of heart to start up a new studio and it can take a lot of time to get things rolling,” said Dergarabed­ian. “But all it takes is one film to emotionall­y or symbolical­ly get things rolling.”

Early January is often a dumping ground in movie theatres and the weekend featured a number of duds. Keanu Reeves’ sci-fi thriller Replicas debuted with just $2.5 million for Entertainm­ent Studios — a career low for Reeves. Opening more solidly, in third place, was Sony’s canine adventure A Dog ’s Way Home with $11.3 million.

The two biggest winners at last Sunday’s Golden Globe Awards — Bohemian Rhapsody and Green Book — both saw a bump. Fox’s Freddie Mercury biopic, which increased its theatre count with hundreds of sing-along screenings, was up 35 per cent with $3.2 million. The best comedy-musical winner Green Book went up 16 per cent with $2 million.

 ?? STX FILMS ?? Actors Bryan Cranston, left, Jahi Di’Allo Winston, and Kevin Hart star in The Upside, which, despite poor reviews, managed to surpass expectatio­ns and debut at the top of the North American box office, pushing the superhero movie Aquaman into second place.
STX FILMS Actors Bryan Cranston, left, Jahi Di’Allo Winston, and Kevin Hart star in The Upside, which, despite poor reviews, managed to surpass expectatio­ns and debut at the top of the North American box office, pushing the superhero movie Aquaman into second place.

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