USA TODAY US Edition

‘Bad Boys,’ ‘Gentlemen’ square off at box office

- Jake Coyle

PARK CITY, Utah – “Boys” trumped “Gentlemen” in movie theaters over the weekend as Will Smith and Martin Lawrence’s “Bad Boys for Life” easily remained the top ticket seller over newcomer “The Gentlemen.”

The third “Bad Boys” film, coming 17 years after “Bad Boys II,” sold $34 million in tickets in its second weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. The R-rated action comedy from Sony Pictures, which cost about $90 million to make, has grossed $120.6 million in two weeks domestical­ly.

Second place went to Sam Mendes’ “1917,” which added theaters in its fifth week of release to keep pace with its Academy Awards momentum. The film grossed $15.8 million over the weekend to bring its North American total to $103.9 million. Worldwide, it has taken in $200.5 million.

It was a good weekend for “1917.” On Saturday night, Mendes took the top prize at the Directors Guild Awards, solidifyin­g the World War I tale as the clear Oscar front-runner and Mendes as the favorite for best director. The film had triumphed at the Producers Guild Awards. And cinematogr­apher, Roger Deakins, won the American Society of Cinematogr­aphers award on Saturday.

The weekend’s top new release was Guy Ritchie’s star-studded gangster film “The Gentlemen.”

The STX release debuted in fourth place with $11 million in ticket sales. The film, a return to the criminal underworld for Ritchie (“Lock Stock and Two Smoking

Barrels”), stars Matthew McConaughe­y as a American expat with a London marijuana empire under threat. Reviews were fairly strong for “The Gentlemen” (72% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) though many critics saw traces of racism in the film’s depictions.

The Universal horror film “The Turning,” an adaptation of Henry James’ “The Turn of the Screw” that drew terrible reviews, collected $7.3 million in its debut weekend.

 ?? BEN ROTHSTEIN ?? Mike (Will Smith, left) and Marcus (Martin Lawrence) are longtime Miami partners weighing their futures as cops in “Bad Boys for Life.”
BEN ROTHSTEIN Mike (Will Smith, left) and Marcus (Martin Lawrence) are longtime Miami partners weighing their futures as cops in “Bad Boys for Life.”

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