The New Zealand Herald

Universal studios has another box office smash on its hands with gangster rap biopic

- Lindsey Bahrap — AP

Straight Outta Compton, the biopic on groundbrea­king gangster rap group N.W.A, has surged to the top of the US box office, smashing opening expectatio­ns along the way.

Universal’s movie earned an astonishin­g US$56.1 million ($86 million) in its debut at the North American box office, according to studio estimates.

Director F. Gary Gray’s wellreceiv­ed film charts the formation and rise of the influentia­l rap group. It cost just US$29 million to produce.

N.W.A members Dr. Dre and Ice Cube served as producers on the film, which has Ice Cube’s son O’Shea Jackson jnr playing his father. Dr. Dre also released the companion piece Compton — his first new album in 16 years.

Nick Carpou, Universal’s president of domestic distributi­on, said they were “elated” with the results. Universal had previously predicted a conservati­ve US$25 to US$30 million opening.

“It really struck a chord with audiences. It’s a story that is resonating right now,” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, Rentrak’s senior media analyst. “It was one of those records that was an important work and a very important expression of a particular viewpoint. To this day, that album has so much power.”

Beyond the fandom around N.W.A and the timeliness of the themes, Universal also launched a clever mar- keting campaign around the film, “Straight Outta Somewhere”, which allows social media users to insert photos in the iconic Straight Outta Compton album cover and write in a hometown of their choosing.

There have been over 5.4 million downloads to date and it trended No 1 across Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for two days in a row.

“We’ve got the best marketers in the business and they understand their audiences,” Carpou said. “The good news here is it attaches to a product that we’re exceedingl­y proud of.”

According to exit polls, audiences for the R-rated film were evenly divided between genders, 51 per cent were under the age of 30, 46 per cent were African-American and 23 per cent white.

Meanwhile, Warner Bros’ PG-13rated adaptation of the 1960s television series The Man From U.N.C.L.E. debuted in third place, behind Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation, with a sluggish US$13.5 million.

“I was hoping for a little higher number, quite frankly,” said Jeff Goldstein, executive vice-president of domestic distributi­on for Warner Bros. The period spy thriller will have an uphill battle to make up its US$80 million production budget.

“[Director] Guy Ritchie made an original and fun movie. Eighty-six per cent of our audience was over 25 and 39 per cent are over 50,” he said. “Older audiences, we all know, don’t rush out opening weekend.”

The Man From U.N.C.L.E. stars Henry Cavill and Armie Hammer as a pair of American and Russian agents in the fashionabl­e Cold Warera film.

Goldstein noted that they weren’t able to attract a significan­t younger audience, who are likely not familiar with the source material. The 7 per cent who did turn out gave the film a favourable A- CinemaScor­e, and Goldstein hopes that word of mouth will spread in the coming weeks.

Fox’s Fantastic Four plummeted to US$8 million to take the fourth-place spot, while The Gift took fifth with US$6.5 million.

It has become a banner year for Universal. The studio crossed the US$2 billion mark domestical­ly on Saturday — four months ahead of previous record-holder Warner Bros.

Straight Outta Compton is Universal’s sixth film to open over US$50 million in 2015 and broke the August record for an R-rated opening. If your finger was the size of planet Earth, you’d be able to feel the difference between houses and cars. Listen to Fletch, Vaughan and Megan on ZM, 6am to 10am

 ?? Picture / AP ?? N.W.A members Dr Dre (left) and Ice Cube served as producers on the biopic Straight Outta Compton.
Picture / AP N.W.A members Dr Dre (left) and Ice Cube served as producers on the biopic Straight Outta Compton.
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