Bangkok Post

Ralph Breaks The Internet, Creed II are tops

- LINDSEY BAHR

Movie sequels are having their own Thanksgivi­ng feast at the box office and fuelling record industry-wide grosses for the long weekend.

Ralph Breaks The Internet and Creed II took the top two spots on the North American charts, beat the openings for the original films and helping the five-day Thanksgivi­ng box-office totals cross the US$300 million (9.91 billion baht) mark for the first time ever. Studios on Sunday said Disney’s Wreck-It Ralph sequel earned an estimated $55.7 million over the threeday weekend and $84.5 million since its Wednesday opening to take first place and become one of the biggest Thanksgivi­ng openings of all time.

Its five-day Thanksgivi­ng grosses are the third-highest of all time, behind Frozen and Hunger Games: Catching Fire. The film sees the return of the vocal talents of John C. Reilly and Sarah Silverman, and it scored with audiences and critics.

“We’re very thankful for this weekend,’’ said Cathleen Taff, who oversees Disney’s theatrical distributi­on. “It was a fantastic start and a great way to kick off the holiday season.’’ The Rocky spinoff Creed II, starring Michael B. Jordan and Sylvester Stallone, placed second with $35.3 million from the weekend and $55.8 million since Wednesday, far surpassing the first film’s Thanksgivi­ng debut in 2015. The sequel, directed by Steven Caple Jr, has Jordan’s Adonis Creed fighting the son of Ivan Drago.

“This is a timeless franchise for us at MGM, and it’s a thrill to see both its legacy and new generation of audiences continue to respond to Rocky Balboa and Adonis Creed in this time when we need uplifting stories,’’ Jonathan Glickman, president of MGM’s Motion Picture Group, said in a statement. Third place went to Illuminati­on Entertainm­ent’s Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch, which earned $30.2 million in its second weekend, and just barely beat out the Fantastic Beasts sequel, Crimes Of Grindelwal­d ($29.7 million) which is also in weekend two.

There was little left at the table for the latest version of Robin Hood, starring Taron Egerton. The poorly reviewed pic from Lionsgate’s Summit Entertainm­ent grossed only $9.1 million over the weekend and $14.2 million in its first five days in cinemas against a reported production budget of nearly $100 million. Universal’s crowd-pleaser Green Book, starring Mahershala Ali and Viggo Mortensen, expanded to 1,063 locations after a limited start and took ninth place with $5.4 million.

Peter Farrelly directed the film based on the true story of a road trip through the Jim Crow-era South. With awards buzz, good reviews and an A+ CinemaScor­e for the movie, Universal’s distributi­on chief Jim Orr said he expects it to have a long life at the domestic box office. Another awards-season movie, Fox Searchligh­t’s acclaimed period piece The Favourite, with Emma Stone, Rachel Weisz and Oliva Colman, opened in four locations to $420,000.

Overall, it was a remarkable Thanksgivi­ng frame at the box office for the industry. It’s the first time ever that the total domestic box office has surpassed $300 million over the five days counted around the Thanksgivi­ng holiday. Box-office tracker Comscore is projecting a $314 million total.

“This is a perfectly fitting Thanksgivi­ng for a year that’s had its share of records being broken,’’ said Comsore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian.

 ??  ?? From left, Ralph, voiced by John C. Reilly, Yess, voiced by Taraji P. Henson, and Vanellope von Schweetz, voiced by Sarah Silverman in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
From left, Ralph, voiced by John C. Reilly, Yess, voiced by Taraji P. Henson, and Vanellope von Schweetz, voiced by Sarah Silverman in Ralph Breaks The Internet.

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