Waterloo Region Record

Clooney’s Suburbicon tanks, Saw sequel No. 1 with $16.3M

- Jake Coyle

NEW YORK — George Clooney’s “Suburbicon” notched one of the most dismal widereleas­e debuts in recent years on a sluggish pre-Halloween weekend where the horror sequel “Jigsaw” topped all releases despite an underperfo­rming debut.

The eighth “Saw” film landed at No. 1 with $16.3 million in North American ticket sales, according to studio estimates Sunday. That came in below industry expectatio­ns and suggested the revived “Saw” franchise isn’t connecting with audiences the way other recent horror entries have.

In its first release since the Harvey Weinstein scandal began unfolding, the beleaguere­d Weinstein Co. feebly released a horror sequel of its own: “Amityville: The Awakening.” It played in an unusual Saturday-only engagement on just 10 screens, and grossed a mere $742.

“Jigsaw” distributo­r Lionsgate also claimed the No. 2 spot with $10 million in the second week of release for “Tyler Perry’s Boo 2! A Madea Halloween.”

Made for about $10 million, “Jigsaw” comes seven years after the notoriousl­y gruesome franchise — famously dubbed “torture porn” — bid adieu with “Saw 3D: The Final Chapter.”

Critics weren’t happy to see its return, giving “Jigsaw” a 39 per cent Rotten Tomatoes score. The Hollywood Reporter said the film “now feels like an outlier in a horror marketplac­e dominated by films that typically favour spooks over spurts.” Opening-weekend moviegoers also weren’t overwhelme­d, giving the film a modest B CinemaScor­e.

But that rating still easily surpassed the D-minus grade that greeted Clooney’s latest directoria­l effort.

Despite debuting on more than 2,000 screens, “Suburbicon” managed just $2.8 million, making it one of Paramount Pictures’ worst performing wide-releases ever and marking a new box-office low for Clooney as a director and star Matt Damon.

The Miles Teller PTSD drama “Thank You For Your Service,” directed by “American Sniper” writer Jason Hall, also opened weakly with $3.7 million in 2,054 theatres for DreamWorks and Universal.

Business overall was slow ahead of Halloween. Weekend ticket sales totalled about $75 million making it the secondlowe­st grossing frame of the year in the U.S. and Canada.

“Thor: Ragnarok” began its worldwide rollout, was a different story. The Disney release grossed $107.6M internatio­nally and opens in North America on Friday.

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