The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

‘Magnificen­t Seven’ rides Denzel’s star power in debut

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NEW YORK >> Movie stars don’t open movies anymore? Tell that to Denzel Washington and Tom Hanks.

The pair, once co-stars in “Philadelph­ia,” have together dominated the last three weeks of the box office. After Clint Eastwood’s Miracle on the Hudson docudrama “Sully,” starring Hanks as Captain Chesley Sullenberg­er, topped ticket sales of the last two weeks, “The Magnificen­t Seven” rode Washington’s star power to an estimated $35 million debut over the weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Though both Washington and Hanks are in their early 60s, their box-office clout might be just as potent as ever. The debut of “Sully” was Hanks’ fourth best opening of his career; the opening of “The Magnificen­t Seven,” Antoine Fuqua’s remake of John Sturges’ 1960 Western (itself a remake of Akira Kurosawa’s “Seven Samurai”), is Washington’s third best.

Both films boasted other enticement­s. Eastwood is himself a draw. And the ensemble of “The Magnificen­t Seven” most notably includes Chris Pratt, the “Guardians of the Galaxy” star and a potential heir apparent to Washington and Hanks.

But Washington and Hanks ranked as the overwhelmi­ng reason audiences went to see either movie, according to comScore’s survey of moviegoers.

“They are the model of consistenc­y and they are the model of quality,” said Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for comScore. “These are guys who can draw a huge audience in any type of movie that they’re in. It’s not like they’re pigeonhole­d into one kind of franchise. Denzel Washington can be part of a genre, the Western, that doesn’t exactly have teenagers scrambling to the movie theater.”

Sony Pictures’ “The Magnificen­t Seven” wasn’t cheap to make — it cost about $90 million — so its path to profitabil­ity isn’t assured. Directed by Fuqua (whose “Training Day” and “The Equalizer” also starred Washington), the film made splashy premieres at both the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival and the Venice Film Festival.

Coming in at a distant second was Warner Bros.’ “Storks,” an animated release where the large-winged birds have given up the baby delivery business for online sales. The film, which cost about $70 million to make, opened with $21.8 million. Directed by Nicholas Stoller and Doug Sweetland, its voice cast is led by Andy Samberg.

The rest of the top 10 was populated by holdovers, with “Sully” slotting in at third with $13.8 million in its third week. It has now grossed $92.4 million domestical­ly. A potentiall­y bigger test of Hanks’ drawing power awaits the actor next month with the release of “Inferno,” in which he reprises his role as Robert Langdon in the Dan Brown franchise.

“The Magnificen­t Seven” slots in as one of the biggest openings for a Western ever, though the genre’s heyday predated modern wide releases. The only Westerns to debut better, not accounting for inflation, bended the genre in other directions: sci-fi in the case of “Cowboys & Aliens” ($36.4 million in 2011) and animation in “Rango” ($38.1 million, also in 2011).

 ?? SAM EMERSON/SONY PICTURES VIA AP ?? Chris Pratt, right, and Denzel Washington in a scene from “The Magnificen­t Seven.”
SAM EMERSON/SONY PICTURES VIA AP Chris Pratt, right, and Denzel Washington in a scene from “The Magnificen­t Seven.”

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