Los Angeles Times

‘King Arthur’ isn’t expected to dethrone ‘Guardians’

- By Ryan Faughnder ryan.faughnder@latimes.com

“King Arthur: Legend of the Sword” will try to pull an Excalibur-like miracle from a box-office stone this weekend. The new Warner Bros. movie will face tough odds dethroning the current ruler of the multiplex: “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.”

The latest hit from Walt Disney Co.’s Marvel Studios is expected to easily hold its top perch on the domestic charts for the second week in a row, after providing a solid start to the summer movie season.

That leaves a potentiall­y close battle for second place between Guy Ritchie’s bigbudget take on the Arthurian legend and 20th Century Fox’s Amy Schumer raunchy mother-daughter comedy “Snatched,” which opens in wide release Friday. Both will attempt to shave off segments of the audience left in the wake of Marvel’s spacetrave­ling outlaws.

Here’s what to expect at the multiplex:

Galactic box office

James Gunn’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” sequel aced its first box-office test last weekend, defying sequel fatigue with $146 million in domestic ticket sales to score the second biggest opening of the year behind “Beauty and the Beast.” “Guardians” is the rare sequel that opened higher than its predecesso­r — by an impressive 55%.

The question is how much the movie will drop in its second go-around. Marvel sequels tend to decline about 60%, so “Guardians 2” may add $58 million to its haul Friday through Sunday. The first “Guardians” debuted with $94 million in its first three days and fell 55% in its second weekend.

“Guardians 2,” starring main players Chris Pratt, Vin Diesel and Bradley Cooper, plus newcomers Kurt Russell and Sylvester Stallone, is doing powerful business overseas as well. The movie, which cost $200 million to make, has amassed $285 million from foreign countries, including China, Britain and Germany.

Return of the ‘King’?

Does the world want another movie based on the story of King Arthur? Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow hope so, after spending $175 million to produce Ritchie’s vision of medieval magic and sword fights. The film is expected to open with $25 million in the United States and Canada, a rough start for such an expensive movie.

Ritchie has been a respected filmmaker since his 1998 debut “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.” But Charlie Hunnam, who plays Arthur, is unproven as a box-office draw, and poor early reviews could turn the film into the summer’s first major flop.

There’s a chance that the action-adventure will perform like last year’s “Legend of Tarzan,” which was no blockbuste­r but did better than most people expected. And like “Tarzan,” “King Arthur” also could do better internatio­nally as it opens in dozens of countries, including China, this week.

Will ‘Snatched’ steal sales?

The summer movie season usually delivers at least one original raunchy comedy that scores box-office gold. Chernin Entertainm­ent and 20th Century Fox are hoping that “Snatched” will break out.

Starring Schumer and Goldie Hawn as a traveling daughter and mother on an exotic vacation that goes horribly wrong, “Snatched” is poised for an opening of $15 million to $20 million, which would be lower than the $30 million bow for Schumer’s 2015 hit “Trainwreck.” Yet raunchy female-led comedies often do better than pre-release tracking suggests, and the film could appeal to moviegoers avoiding the superhero action.

 ?? Daniel Smith Warner Bros. Pictures ?? JUDE LAW stars as Vortigern in “King Arthur: Legend of the Sword.”
Daniel Smith Warner Bros. Pictures JUDE LAW stars as Vortigern in “King Arthur: Legend of the Sword.”

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