The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Frozen 2 sets Thanksgivi­ng record

- REBECCA RUBIN VARIETY.COM

LOS ANGELES — Disney's Frozen 2 stuffed the box office competitio­n during U.S. Thanksgivi­ng, generating US$85.2 million over the weekend and a record-setting $123.7 million over the five-day holiday frame.

The animated adventure soared past the previous U.S. Thanksgivi­ng benchmark held by 2013's The Hunger Games: Catching Fire and its $109 million bounty between the Wednesday and Sunday holiday frame. Like, Frozen 2, the Hunger Games sequel opened a week ahead of Thanksgivi­ng.

After two weekends in theaters, Frozen 2 is nearing the $300 million mark in North America with ticket sales currently at a massive $287 million. Frozen 2 made $130 million in its inaugural outing, cementing a new high-water mark for Disney Animation.

Though Frozen 2 earned a turkey's share of grosses, two new movies successful­ly served as counter-programmin­g against Disney's all-audience tentpole and carved out solid box office receipts.

Propelled by critical raves and audience adoration to match, Lionsgate's Knives Out, a murder mystery directed by Rian Johnson, launched ahead of expectatio­ns, securing second place on domestic charts with $27 million over the weekend and $41.7 million between Wednesday and Sunday. Heading into the weekend, the whodunit starring Daniel Craig, Jamie Lee Curtis and Chris Evans was projected to earn $20 million to $25 million in its first five days of release. The movie cost $40 million and looks to be a triumph for original content at multiplexe­s.

Fellow new release, Universal and Makeready's Queen and Slim, looks to be another win in favor of original fare. The romantic drama starring Daniel Kaluuya and Jodie Turner-Smith opened at No. 5, collecting $11.7 million over the weekend and $15.8 million over the five-day holiday period. Directed by Melina Matsoukas and written by Lena Waithe, Queen and Slim carries a roughly $20 million price tag. More than 50 per cent of opening weekend crowds were African America, while 24 per cent were Caucasian, 15 per cent were Hispanic and three per cent were Asian. More than 60 per cent of ticket buyers were over the age of 25.

Holdovers including DisneyFox's Ford v Ferrari and Sony's A Beautiful Day in the Neighborho­od. Matt Damon and Christian Bale's sports drama, now in its third outing, earned $13 million over the weekend and $19 million during the fivedays, propelling its domestic tally to $81 million. Tom Hanks' feel-good film about Mister Rogers made $12 million over the traditiona­l weekend and $17.6 million over the holidays. After two weeks of release, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborho­od has generated $34 million.

While this U.S. Thanksgivi­ng didn't best last year's $315 million benchmark, the holiday is already helping offset what has otherwise been a bleak November at the box office. Heading into the long weekend, overall ticket sales were behind over seven per cent, according to Comscore. Now, box office receipts are down by 5.6 per cent.

 ?? MARIO ANZUONI • REUTERS ?? Cast members Idina Menzel (left) and Kristen Bell pose at the premiere for the film Frozen II in Los Angeles.
MARIO ANZUONI • REUTERS Cast members Idina Menzel (left) and Kristen Bell pose at the premiere for the film Frozen II in Los Angeles.

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