The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

‘Aladdin’ prince of the box office with $86.1M

- Photos and text from wire services

LOS ANGELES — Moviegoers voted with their dollars and chose the familiar over the new this Memorial Day weekend. The Walt Disney Co.’s live-action remake of “Aladdin” crushed the competitio­n at the box office, which included two new original R-rated films that opened as counterpro­gramming to the family pic: The critically acclaimed teen comedy “Booksmart” and the horror “Brightburn.”

But the strategy didn’t quite work. “Aladdin” did better than expected, grossing an estimated $86.1 million to take the top spot at the North American box office, according to studio estimates on Sunday. It’ll likely pass $100 million by Monday. The others didn’t even break $10 million.

“Aladdin,” a musical-adventure directed by Guy Ritchie, stars Will Smith, Mena Massoud and Naomi Scott and draws heavily on the music and story of the 1992 animated film (the top earner of that year) that it’s based on.

“We’re delighted,” said Cathleen Taff, Disney’s president of theatrical distributi­on. “Between the fun action-adventure and spectacula­r music combined with the cast, which is so charming and has such great chemistry together, we’ve hit something that fans are embracing and walking out of wanting to share with others.”

Audiences, who were 54 % women and 51 % families, gave the remake an A CinemaScor­e, which is much more promising for its continued success than the tepid critical reviews. The studio also got another metric with the newly launched verified Rotten Tomatoes audience rating. Over 7,000 people rated the film to give it a 93 %.

“I’m so pleased that Rotten Tomatoes launched this, it means people bought the ticket. You can trust that people giving you the score actually sat through the movie,” Taff said. “We couldn’t ask for a better barometer of fan reception.”

With an internatio­nal gross of $121 million, “Aladdin” has already earned over $207 million globally. It cost a reported $183 million to produce.

The top few spots at the holiday box office were populated by known brands and sequels. “John Wick: Chapter 3 — Parabellum,” now in its second weekend, placed second with $24.4 million. “Avengers: Endgame” took third with $16.8 million, and “Pokemon Detective Pikachu” landed in fourth with $13.3 million.

Original films are struggling to attract significan­t audiences at the moment. Sony’s modestly budgeted horror movie “Brightburn” opened in fifth with $7.5 million. The James Gunn-produced film starring Elizabeth Banks puts a sinister spin on the Superman myth and has received mediocre reviews from critics.

A surprise for many, however, was “Booksmart,” an Annapurna film distribute­d by United Artists Releasing, which debuted in sixth with only $6.5 million, despite excellent reviews and steady buzz from its SXSW film festival debut. Although in line with studio expectatio­ns going into the weekend, some had thought that this would be a summer breakout hit.

Olivia Wilde directed the film that stars Kaitlyn Dever and Beanie Feldstein as two teenage overachiev­ers and rule-followers who decide to go to a party on their last night of high school. Many compared it to “Superbad,” which opened in August 2007 to $33 million.

But despite all the hype, including a lot of celebrity endorsemen­ts on social media from the likes of Natalie Portman and Ryan Reynolds, audiences just didn’t turn out for “Booksmart” in noteworthy numbers.

 ?? Daniel Smith / Disney via Associated Press ?? Naomi Scott as Jasmine and Mena Massoud as Aladdin, right, in Disney’s live-action adaptation of the 1992 animated classic “Aladdin.”
Daniel Smith / Disney via Associated Press Naomi Scott as Jasmine and Mena Massoud as Aladdin, right, in Disney’s live-action adaptation of the 1992 animated classic “Aladdin.”

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