The Borneo Post

‘Crazy Rich Asians’ overcomes competitio­n, Hollywood’s biases

-

‘ CRAZY Rich Asians’, the first Hollywood film in almost a quarter century with a largely Asian cast, opened as the No. 1 weekend film in North American theatres, dispensing with last week’s winner ‘ The Meg’ and a new Mark Wahlberg picture.

Based on Kevin Kwan’s 2013 novel with the same name, the Warner Bros. romantic comedy collected an estimated US$ 25.2 million in US and Canadian theatres, researcher ComScore Inc. said in an email Sunday. That beat last weekend’s winner, ‘ The Meg’, which landed in second place, and ‘ Mile 22’, an actionthri­ller starring Wahlberg that opened in third.

Helped by advertisin­g, good reviews and social- media buzz, ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ is performing well above the studio’s early estimate of about US$ 18 million for the five days ending Sunday. Minorities including Asians are under- represente­d in front of the camera and behind, and advocacy groups have looked to the film to help break down barriers.

‘ Crazy Rich Asians’ stars Constance Wu as Rachel Chu, a Chinese- American economics professor accompanyi­ng her boyfriend Nick Young, played by Harry Golding, to Singapore for his best friend’s wedding. Once there, she discovers the family is filthy rich and she has to deal with his disapprovi­ng mother.

The two- hour film had a production budget of US$ 30 million and was expected to take in as much as US$ 25 million from Friday to Sunday for AT& T Inc’s newly acquired Warner Bros. division. Critics especially like the movie, with 92 per cent recommendi­ng it, according to aggregator RottenToma­toes. com. ‘ The Joy Luck Club’ of 1993 was the last English- language Hollywood film that featured an all-Asian cast.

‘ The Meg’, in its second weekend, collected US$ 21.2 million while ‘ Mile 22’, from STX Entertainm­ent, pulled in US$ 13.6 million. The latter film features Wahlberg as a toughas-nails CIA officer tasked with smuggling a mysterious police officer wanted for espionage from an American embassy in Southeast Asia to a safe airfield for extraction. Analysts at Box Office Pro expected the action film to bring in US$ 18 million. The film cost an estimated US$ 35 million to make, according to Imdb.com

Critics didn’t like ‘Mile 22’, with just 22 per cent recommendi­ng the film, according to RottenToma­toes.com.

The weekend’s other new release, ‘Alpha’, took in US$ 10.5 million, above the US$ 6 million predicted by Box Office Mojo. The Studio 8 release features a teenage boy who befriends a wolf to survive in the last Ice Age. The film, which opened in 2,719 theatres, was well-received, with 83 per cent of critics recommendi­ng it.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? (Above) ‘Alpha’, about a boy who befriends a wolf to survive in the last Ice Age, opens at fourth place. • (Right) Iko Uwais stars in ‘Mile 22’, another new release which takes third spot.
(Above) ‘Alpha’, about a boy who befriends a wolf to survive in the last Ice Age, opens at fourth place. • (Right) Iko Uwais stars in ‘Mile 22’, another new release which takes third spot.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia