New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

‘Venom 2’ smashes pandemic box office record; ‘No Time to Die’ soars overseas

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“Venom: Let There Be Carnage” — the highly anticipate­d sequel to Marvel and Sony Pictures’ irreverent antihero origin story — devoured its prey at the North American box office this weekend, debuting at $90.1 million, according to estimates from measuremen­t firm ComScore.

In addition to outperform­ing other new releases, the edgy film about the relationsh­ip between a troubled journalist and his parasitic alien symbiote (both played by Tom Hardy) also beat the pandemic-era three-day opening weekend record previously set by fellow Marvel blockbuste­r “Black Widow,” which opened domestical­ly at $80 million in July.

The extra box office revenue “Black Widow” likely forfeited due to its simultaneo­us release on Disney+ later became the subject of a lawsuit brought by star/ executive producer Scarlett Johansson against Disney, which was settled last week. By contrast, “Let There Be Carnage” debuted in theaters only, as will the rest of Sony’s fall slate.

“The exclusivit­y in theaters just can’t go unnoticed because that is really a pillar of our strategy in terms of this big IP 1 / 8intellect­ual property3 / 8,” said Sanford Panitch, president of Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent Motion Picture Group.

“They’re made for theaters, and it’s just so great to see the audience being willing to come out to enjoy it.”

The second installmen­t in the “Venom” franchise also surpassed its predecesso­r’s massive debut haul of $80 million, which set an October opening weekend record at the domestic box office in 2018. That number was soon topped by “Joker,” another sinister comic book adaptation this time from Marvel competitor DC the following year.

“Joker” still holds the October opening weekend record at $93.5 million, with the “Venom” films in second and third.

Directed by Andy Serkis, “Let There Be Carnage” drew a middling 59 percent critic score on review aggregatio­n site Rotten Tomatoes — up significan­tly from its widely panned precursor’s 32 percent showing. The movie, which introduces a rival parasitic villain named Carnage, also stars Woody Harrelson, Michelle Williams, Naomie Harris, Stephen Graham and Reid Scott.

“The youth of the franchise — in terms of the potential that it has and the love for this character - is so great to see,” Panitch said.

“And it highlights … the importance of the IP,” added Adrian Smith, president of Sony’s domestic release arm. “As a studio, our patience and strategy with our big IP paid off.”

Overseas, the long-delayed James Bond entry “No Time to Die” is on track for an impressive internatio­nal opening of $119.1 million, exceeding expectatio­ns and becoming the first film since the COVID-19 crisis to launch at more than $100 million abroad without playing in China.

Securing second place this weekend at the North American box office is United Artists Releasing’s animated comedy “The Addams Family 2,” which collected $18 million.

The Halloween-themed family flick came up about $10 million shy of its 2019 parent film’s opening-weekend performanc­e. The shortfall could be attributed to its hybrid release in theaters and video-on-demand, as well as its dismal 27 percent Rotten Tomatoes score and wariness among parents of its unvaccinat­ed under-12 demographi­c.

 ?? Sony Pictures ?? Tom Hardy in “Venom: Let There Be Carnage.”
Sony Pictures Tom Hardy in “Venom: Let There Be Carnage.”

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