Imperial Valley Press

Franchise fatigue continues with ‘Men in Black’ and ‘Shaft’

- BY LINDSEY BAHR AP Film Writer

LOS ANGELES — Brand familiarit­y isn’t everything when it comes to attracting audiences to the multiplex, and Hollywood is learning that lesson the hard way this summer with a slew of underperfo­rming sequels and reboots. That so-called franchise fatigue came to a head this weekend with the releases of “Men in Black: Internatio­nal” and “Shaft.”

The writing may have been on the wall after neither an X-Men movie (“Dark Phoenix”) nor a Godzilla movie (“Godzilla: King of the Monsters”) could get moviegoers enthusiast­ic enough to turn out. But this weekend, down over 50% from last year, is the worst yet.

“This was a rough weekend,” said Comscore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian. “We’ve had some big franchises that are not resonating with audiences or critics.”

And there’s a common denominato­r between all the recent disappoint­ments: Poor reviews. All four have been certified “rotten” on Rotten Tomatoes.

“Men in Black: Internatio­nal” took the No. 1 spot in North America, but it’s a dubious distinctio­n for the Tessa Thompson and Chris Hemsworth-led reboot which isn’t exactly the franchise-revitalize­r it hoped to be. Sony Pictures on Sunday estimates the F. Gary Gray-directed film earned only $28.5 million over the weekend against a reported $110 million production budget. The three previous “Men in Black” films all opened to over $50 million not accounting for inflation.

However, internatio­nal audiences are helping the bottom line with the film earning $73.7 million from 36 markets, bringing its global total to $102.2 million.

The weekend’s other big new release, “Shaft,” which introduces another generation to the franchise, couldn’t even manage to carve out a place in the top five, which instead was populated mostly by holdovers.

“The Secret Life of Pets 2” got the No. 2 spot in its second weekend with $23.8 million. Disney’s “Aladdin,” now in weekend four, took third with $16.7 million. “Dark Phoenix” placed fourth with $9 million and “Rocketman” coasted to fifth with $8.8 million.

“Shaft,” a Warner Bros. release, placed sixth on the charts, with a disappoint­ing $8.3 million.

Directed by Tim Story, “Shaft” features Samuel L. Jackson reprising his role from almost 20 years ago and Jessie T. Usher as his son. It was made for around $30 million.

Although critics did not praise the film, audiences who turned out (54% of whom were women) were more enthusiast­ic, giving the film an A CinemaScor­e.

Even some originals had a tough time this weekend. Amazon Studios expanded its Mindy Kaling and Emma Thompson comedy “Late Night,” which it acquired the North American rights to for a Sundance record of $13 million , to 2,220 theaters where it earned $5.1 million.

“The real bright spots have been the smaller indies,” Dergarabed­ian said. “We think of summer as blockbuste­r season, but it’s turned into indie film season.”

Jim Jarmusch’s star-studded zombie comedy “The Dead Don’t Die” mostly survived its mixed reviews and opened to $2.35 million from 613 locations.

Documentar­ies like “Echo in the Canyon” and “Pavarotti” have been making a modest mark in limited release, and the acclaimed drama “The Last Black Man in San Francisco” expanded to 36 locations and earned $361,120.

It expands further next weekend.

But the marketplac­e is hurting and it’s not a problem with the weekend, which last year saw “Incredible­s 2” open to over $182 million, but with the major movies themselves.

The disappoint­ments have come, mostly, from “movies that just don’t deliver,” according to Dergarabed­ian.

But it’s too simplistic to fault all franchises and next weekend the marketplac­e will be singing a different tune when “Toy Story 4” opens.

“’Toy Story 4’ is going to erase the memory of this very tough weekend,” Dergarabed­ian said.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Where available, the latest internatio­nal numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. “Men in Black: Internatio­nal,” $28.5 million ($73.7 million internatio­nal).

2. “The Secret Life of Pets 2,” $23.8 million ($8.5 million internatio­nal).

3. “Aladdin,” $16.7 million ($47.5 million internatio­nal).

4. “Dark Phoenix,” $9 million ($24.2 million internatio­nal).

5. “Rocketman,” $8.8 million ($8.5 million internatio­nal).

6. “Shaft,” $8.3 million.

7. “Godzilla: King of the Monsters,” $8.1 million ($14.1 million internatio­nal).

 ?? KEYTE/SONY/COLUMBIA PICTURES VIA AP ?? This image released by Sony Pictures shows Tessa Thompson and Chris Hemsworth in a scene from Columbia Pictures’ “Men in Black: Internatio­nal.” GILES
KEYTE/SONY/COLUMBIA PICTURES VIA AP This image released by Sony Pictures shows Tessa Thompson and Chris Hemsworth in a scene from Columbia Pictures’ “Men in Black: Internatio­nal.” GILES

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