The Mercury News

Virus puts a damper on ‘Suicide Squad’ opening

- By Jake Coyle

Moviegoing, once expected to be closer to seminormal levels by now, continues to be battered by the pandemic, the delta variant of the coronaviru­s and in-home streaming. The latest casualty: James Gunn’s “The Suicide Squad,” a critically acclaimed, carnage-ridden would-be smash that disappoint­ed with $26.5 million in estimated ticket sales.

The Warner Bros. film, which was released simultaneo­usly on HBO Max, could claim one pandemic record: the top R-rated opening. But “The Suicide Squad,” featuring the “Guardians of the Galaxy” director’s first DC Comics film, had seemed poised to be a bigger hit — and may have been if the delta variant wasn’t keeping a lot of moviegoers home.

Jeff Goldstein, distributi­on chief for Warner Bros., acknowledg­ed the recovery is taking longer than anyone hoped.

“We always knew the ramp-up would be two steps forward and one step back,” Goldstein said. “But when we’re living it, it’s not great.”

As recently as a month ago, the outlook for movie theaters was brightenin­g. Marvel’s “Black Widow” set a pandemic-best mark with a $80 million domestic debut. Now, that movie’s hybrid release is the focus of a bitter legal battle between star Scarlett Johansson and the Walt Disney Co. that has larger ramificati­ons for the economics of big-budget movies in the streaming era.

More importantl­y, COVID-19 cases in the United States have since rocketed — from a few thousand daily infections to more than 100,000.

That has led some to curtail indoor activities and some states to consider changing regulation­s. New York is planning to make vaccinatio­n a requiremen­t for indoor dining and other venues, including movie theaters.

“I think avid moviegoers have returned to theaters, and they show up first night and through the weekend,” Goldstein said. “But what we’re not seeing is the casual moviegoers — those who were interested and would have gone in a pre-pandemic context. Right now, they’re not quite there.”

“The Suicide Squad” cost about $185 million to make, but the current state of the box office doesn’t offer much of a chance for profitabil­ity for movies at that scale.

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? David Dastmalchi­an, left, John Cena, King Shark played by Sylvester Stallone, Idris Elba and Daniela Melchoir in “The Suicide Squad,” which had a disappoint­ing opening.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES David Dastmalchi­an, left, John Cena, King Shark played by Sylvester Stallone, Idris Elba and Daniela Melchoir in “The Suicide Squad,” which had a disappoint­ing opening.

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