The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Terminator: Dark Fate’ is No. 1, but it’s no winner

- Photos and text from wire services

LOS ANGELES — It might be judgment day for the Terminator franchise.

Despite generally favorable reviews and the return of star Linda Hamilton and producer James Cameron, “Terminator: Dark Fate” has opened well below expectatio­ns at the box office. Studios on Sunday estimate that “Dark Fate” earned only $29 million from over 4,000 North American locations. The film from Paramount Pictures cost a reported $185 million to produce.

It was enough to win the top spot at the box office, but it’s a weak victory for the franchise.

Although “Dark Fate,” which was directed by “Deadpool’s” Tim Miller, received much better reviews (currently at 69 percent on Rotten Tomatoes) and was praised for being a return to form to Cameron’s original films, it opened just slightly ahead of 2015’s roundly derided “Terminator: Genisys.”

“These big brands carry with them huge expectatio­ns, often unrealisti­c expectatio­ns,” said Comscore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian. “It wasn’t for lack of enthusiasm for the stars and filmmakers.”

Internatio­nally, “Dark Fate” did much better, earning $72.9 million from 48 markets. Fox Internatio­nal, not Paramount, is handling internatio­nal distributi­on, excluding China.

Second place went to “Joker,” which added $13.9 million, bringing its global earnings to $934 million in just five weeks in theaters. “Maleficent: Mistress of Evil” landed in third place in its third weekend with an additional $12.2 million. The Angelina Jolieled sequel has grossed $84.3 million in North America.

One bright spot of the weekend, which is down nearly 19 percent from last year when “Bohemian Rhapsody” opened, is Focus Features’ “Harriet,” which is the first film ever made about Harriet Tubman. Starring Cynthia Erivo in the title role, “Harriet” performed better than expected, earning $12 million from just over 2,000 theaters to take fourth place. The film scored a coveted A+ CinemaScor­e from audiences, who were primarily female (62 percent) and over the age of 35 (59 percent). African Americans also made up a significan­t portion of the audience (49 percent) according to exit polls.

“It’s really heartwarmi­ng and gives you a lot of faith that there are still a lot of people who want to see stories about real life superheroe­s,” said Focus Features distributi­on president Lisa Bunnell. “There’s a real feeling of love for this movie. I think it’s inspiratio­nal for people to see.”

Focus did outreach to faithbased groups and educators and has seen enormous success with group sales as a result.

Other newcomers struggled to find that kind of enthusiasm this weekend. Edward Norton’s adaptation of Jonathan Lethem’s “Motherless Brooklyn” opened in ninth place to $3.7 million, while the animated “Arctic Dogs” took 10th with $3.1 million.

One of the highest profile new films of the weekend, Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman,” does not have any box office numbers to report, however, because Netflix declines to provide numbers for its

“With all eyes on ‘The Irishman,’ it’s unfortunat­e that we don’t have numbers on it,” Dergarabed­ian said.

 ?? Kerry Brown / Associated Press ?? This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Arnold Schwarzene­gger in “Terminator: Dark Fate.”
Kerry Brown / Associated Press This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Arnold Schwarzene­gger in “Terminator: Dark Fate.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States