The Mercury News

‘Wonder Woman’ a pandemic winner but a financial loser

- Ry Rebecca Rubin Variety.com

“Wonder Woman 1984” led domestic box office charts for the third straight weekend without much in the way of competitio­n. The superhero sequel nabbed $3 million between Friday and Sunday, bringing its total in the U.S. and Canada to $32.6 million. Overseas, the film grabbed $4.7 million for an internatio­nal tally of $98.8 million.

With $131 million in global box office receipts, the “Wonder Woman” sequel has outperform­ed most fellow pandemic-era releases. Yet that doesn’t make up for the film’s mighty $200 million production budget, which is to say the latest outing for Gal Gadot’s DC hero will almost certainly lose money for the studio. Nonetheles­s, Warner Bros. has already greenlit a third installmen­t with Gadot and director Patty Jeninks on board.

The comic book adaptation was released simultaneo­usly on HBO Max in an effort to buoy streaming service subscriber­s. It’s unclear how many HBO Max users watched the movie, though the company touted record viewership. Next weekend, “Wonder Woman 1984” will be taken off HBO Max and it will only be available to watch in theaters until it reaches its traditiona­l home entertainm­ent window. It’s expected to return to the streaming platform a few months later.

Outside of North America, Disney and Pixar’s “Soul” — which skipped U.S. theaters to debut on Disney Plus — continues to pick up steam at the internatio­nal box office. The existentia­l family film amassed $8.9 million from 11 foreign countries, boosting its overseas total to $47.3 million. Without any new nationwide releases, a variety of holdovers rounded out domestic box office charts. In second place, Universal and DreamWorks’ “The Croods: A New Age” pulled in $1.8 million in its seventh week of release for a domestic tally of $36.8 million. Internatio­nally, “The Croods” sequel crossed $90 million after adding $5.1 million from 17 overseas countries. Its global haul hovers at $127 million. The film is currently available on premium video- on- demand platforms.

Another Universal title “News of the World” managed third place with $1.2 million. The Tom Hanks-led Western drama, directed by Paul Greengrass, premiered on Christmas Day and has collected $7 million to date. Netflix has internatio­nal rights to “News of the World.”

Sony’s thriller “Monster Hunter” took in $1.1 million, enough to land the No. 4 spot. After a month in theaters, the video game adaptation with Milla Jovovich has generated $7.8 million. “Fatale,” a psychologi­cal thriller with Hilary Swank and Michael Ealy, rounded out the top five with $670,000 in its fourth weekend of release. That brings its total to $4 million.

Focus Features’ revenge thriller “Promising Young Woman” secured $560,000 over the weekend, finding itself in sixth place and putting its total at $2.7 million. The film falls under its parent company Universal’s early VOD agreement. “Promising Young Woman” lands on home entertainm­ent for a premium price starting on Friday.

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