Bangkok Post

Globalism reigns at box offiffiffi­ce, while Furious passes $1bn

- JAKE COYLE AP

ASouth India sensation, a Hispanic-focused comedy and the highest-grossing fil m ever directed by an African American made up the top three films in North America on a culturally diverse box office weekend.

As expected, it was another runaway weekend for The Fate Of The Furious, which took No. 1 for the third straight week with US$19.4 million (671.498 million baht), according to studio estimates on Sunday. The Universal Pictures release also throttled past $1 billion globally, and passed its predecesso­r, Furious 7, to become the highest-grossing imported film in China with $361 million.

The Fast and the Furious franchise, the latest of which is helmed by F. Gary Gray, has always been held up as a model of the diverse blockbuste­r, given its cast led by Vin Diesel and Dwayne Johnson. But the smaller films that trailed it over the weekend also reflected the box-office might of often underserve­d audiences.

In second domestical­ly with $12 million and drawing an overwhelmi­ngly Hispanic crowd was Eugenio Derbez’s comedy, How To Be A Latin Lover. The film is easily the biggest success yet for Pantelion, the Latino-oriented joint venture of Lionsgate and Grupo Televisa. How To Be A Latin Lover

co-stars Salma Hayek, Rob Lowe and Kristen Bell. But its top draw is Derbez, whose

Instructio­ns Not Included was the highest-grossing Spanish-language film in North America in 2013. The audience for How To Be A Latin Lover was 89% Hispanic.

In third was Baahubali 2: The Conclusion,

a so-called Tollywood (Telugu language) film from South India, which pulled in a remarkable $10.1 million despite playing on just 420 screens. ( The Fate Of The Furious

played on more than 4,000.)

Baahubali 2 even bested a pair of Hollywood’s biggest stars in Emma Watson and Tom Hanks. Their terribly reviewed thriller The Circle, distribute­d by STX Films on behalf of EuropaCorp, opened with $9.3 million.

Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for comScore, said such global weekends at the box office will become more common.

“In what is a slow and would otherwise be unremarkab­le weekend, this is a really interestin­g lineup of films,” said Dergarabed­ian. “This is the final weekend before the summer season kicks off and the blockbuste­rs hit theaters. But this weekend is marked by an incredible amount of multicultu­ral content. It reflects the world that we’re living in.”

Baahubali 2 follows the 2015 original that set box-office records in India, a breakthrou­gh for a non-Hindi film. The 2015 film grossed $9.3 million in the US and more than $100 million worldwide. With $1.8 million on domestic Imax screens, a record for a foreign language film on Imax, Baahubali 2 may break more records.

Its success isn’t surprising to everyone. “We were expecting exactly the numbers we’re seeing right now. We’re happy our expectatio­ns were right,” said Soma Kancherla of the film’s North American distributo­r, Great India Films. “I know for a few people they’re like, ‘Wow,’ but to break even, we needed to make that kind of money.”

The summer movie season begins next week with Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol. 2. With the Marvel behemoth on deck, few new films were released in an otherwise quiet weekend.

Disney’s Guardians Of The Galaxy sequel began its internatio­nal rollout over the weekend, opening in 37 territorie­s ahead of its North American debut. It earned an estimated $101.2 million, a promising start for what’s expected to be one of the summer’s biggest hits.

Guardians will likely be the third $1 billion movie in 2017, following Beauty And The Beast and The Fate Of The Furious. Disney said Vol. 2 is running 57% ahead of the pace of the original, which made $773.3 million in 2014.

 ??  ?? Tom Hanks, Emma Watson and Patton Oswalt in The Circle.
Tom Hanks, Emma Watson and Patton Oswalt in The Circle.

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