Bangkok Post

Don’t Breathe scores, ousts Suicide Squad at box office

- LINDSEY BAHR

The horror movie Don’t Breathe has reason to let out a big sigh of relief. Audiences turned out in droves for the late summer thriller, which brought in US$26.1 million (904 million baht), according to studio estimates released on Sunday.

That’s more than double the early prediction­s for how the scary pic would perform and far above the modest production budget, which was reportedly less than $10 million. Stage 6 Films produced and Sony’s Screen Gems oversaw distributi­on.

Don’t Breathe is about a group of Detroit teens who chose the wrong house to rob — that of a blind, vengeful veteran. It stars Jane Levy and Dylan Minnette and was directed by Fede Alvarez, who is known for the Evil Dead remake.

Sony Pictures Marketing Chief Josh Greenstein noted how rare it was for a film in this genre to have resonated so deeply with critics. The current Rotten Tomatoes score is a very fresh 87%. It also continues Sony’s summer of seeing successes with original films that cost very little to make.

“This marks a string of very profitable hits for Sony with very modest budgets. The Shallows, Sausage Party and now Don’t Breathe were all incredibly profitable because they were made for modest budgets and did incredibly well at the box office,” Greenstein said.

It’s also the latest horror success for Hollywood this summer, which has seen films like Lights Out, The Conjuring 2, and The Purge: Election Year thrive while their bigger budget, spectacle-driven counterpar­ts flailed.

“As it turns out horror is the least scary genre this summer, especially to the bean counters in Hollywood,” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, the senior media analyst for box office tracker comScore. “(They) can almost always be counted on to make money.”

Horror films, Dergarabed­ian said, perform very well on home video too.

Don’t Breathe effectivel­y unseated Suicide Squad from its three week run atop the box office. This weekend, the comic book film Suicide Squad grossed $12.1 million, bringing its domestic total to $282.9 million.

Laika’s Kubo And The Two Strings took third place in its second weekend in cinemas with $7.9 million. The $60 million film has now earned $24.8 million domestical­ly.

Sausage Party, meanwhile, continued to have a ball at the box office, earning $7.7 million for a fourth-place finish and an $80 million domestic total.

The poorly reviewed Jason Statham-led sequel Mechanic: Resurrecti­on, meanwhile, placed fifth in its opening weekend with $7.5 million, according to Lionsgate. The first film opened to $11.4 million in 2011.

Among speciality releases, the Barack and Michelle Obama first date movie Southside With You launched in 813 cinemas to an estimated $3.1 million, while The Weinstein Company’s Roberto Duran boxing biopic Hands of Stone opened in 810 cinemas to $1.7 million.

Overall the box office was up 32% from this weekend last year when Straight Outta Compton opened. Next weekend closes out the summer movie season with the release of the sci-fi film Morgan and the romantic drama The Light Between Oceans.

 ?? Jane Levy, left, and Dylan Minnette in ?? Don’t Breathe.
Jane Levy, left, and Dylan Minnette in Don’t Breathe.

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