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