The Guardian (USA)

Tenet takes more than $50m as film fans return to cinemas

- Mark Sweney

Christophe­r Nolan’s Tenet has taken more than $50m at the box office on its opening weekend as movie fans shrugged off the coronaviru­s pandemic, donned face masks and headed back to big screens.

British movie fans led the way with a $7.1m (£5.4m) UK box office take for Tenet, the first Hollywood blockbuste­r to be released in cinemas since the lockdown in March. It is the biggest box office take for a film in the UK in seven months, since Sam Mendes’s 1917 in January.

Tenet has been viewed as a litmus test of whether fans are ready to return to movie theatres en masse, as the UK cinema industry aims to salvage something from a year destined to be the worst at the box office in three decades. An enthusiast­ic, mask-wearing Tom Cruise was among the fans to catch a screening of Tenet in London.

“We are off to a fantastic start internatio­nally and couldn’t be more pleased,” said Toby Emmerich, the chairman of Warner Bros. “Given the unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces of this global release, we know we are running a marathon, not a sprint, and look forward to long playabilit­y for this film globally for many weeks to come.”

After pushing back the global release of Tenet multiple times because the pandemic was continuing to run rampant in the US – the world’s biggest movie market by some distance – Warner Bros took the unpreceden­ted step of launching internatio­nally first.

Given the reception the film has received, taking $53m internatio­nally and beating analysts’ expectatio­ns, hopes are high that it will replicate that performanc­e when it launches in major markets including the US and China at the weekend.

“If this weekend’s stellar box office performanc­e by Tenet offers any indication, the power of one film to jumpstart the industry has been made manifest,” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, the senior media analyst at Comscore.

With a schedule devoid of fresh Hollywood

blockbuste­rs, cinema owners have had to fall back on low-grossing classics and old hits, with the original Jurassic Park making a return to the top 10 during lockdown.

The box office surge, which follows paltry weekly takes of less than £1m across all films shown in the UK and Ireland since cinemas reopened in July, bodes well for upcoming releases including James Bond: No Time To Die.

 ?? Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters ?? People take their seats inside the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square cinema on the opening day of the film Tenet in London.
Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters People take their seats inside the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square cinema on the opening day of the film Tenet in London.
 ?? Photograph: Simon Shin/SOPA Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? A woman wearing a protective mask walks by a billboard of the movie Tenet in South Korea.
Photograph: Simon Shin/SOPA Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck A woman wearing a protective mask walks by a billboard of the movie Tenet in South Korea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States