Latest news with #PostTrak
Yahoo
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
‘28 Years Later' $5.8M, ‘Elio' $3M Previews – Friday AM Box Office
UPDATED FRIDAY AM AFTER EXCLUSIVE: Sony's 28 Years Later gobbled up $5.8M in previews Thursday night. That's an excellent preview number for a horror movie, especially in these times, besting the Thursday nights of Final Destination Bloodlines ($5.5M), Sinners ($4.7M), pre-Covid's A Quiet Place ($4.3M) and even post-Covid's Scream VI ($5.7M). The question is whether moviegoers, like the undead themselves, will continue to run to 28 Years Later. More from Deadline '28 Years Later' Review: Danny Boyle Delivers Severed Heads And Broken Hearts In His Gory Zombie-Horror Threequel What Are The Critics Saying About '28 Years Later'? Deadline On The Red Carpet: Aaron Taylor-Johnson On '28 Years Later's Brexit Nod, Danny Boyle Talks "The Growth" Of Horror, Jodie Comer On "Manifesting" A Movie Musical & Tom Rothman With An Actor Tip As we saw with the Rotten Tomatoes audience score of 68% last night, PostTrak audiences were also a hard crowd for this Danny Boyle movie giving it 3 stars and a 54% definite recommend. Men over 25 showed up at 52% and gave the zombie third chapter its best grades at 75%. Women over 25 were next at 27% (72% grade), followed by women under 25 at 13% (65%) and men under 25 at 9% (74%). Meanwhile, Disney/Pixar's Elio in total Wednesday and Thursday previews did $3M. The animated feature is booked in 3,750 theatres including 725 premium large format screens, 2,500+ 3D Screens and 175 D-Box/Motion screens. Elio, 28 Years Later and How to Train Your Dragon are sharing the PLFs, while Imax auditoriums will be held by the latter title. Those who watched Elio, are loving it with a 60% definite recommend from the general audience and 4 1/2 stars. Kids under 12, a near even split between boys and girls at 51%/49%, also think it's 4 1/2 stars. Parents, mostly Dads yesterday at 56%, gave it 4 stars. With yesterday being Juneteenth, a young federal holiday, distribution sources are always mixed on whether it's a big moviegoing day or not. Kids are already off from school. Yeah, but adults are off from work. While not massive, the day did have a pulse, check it out: Eight of the movies in the top 10 saw spikes in their daily grosses over Wednesday including How to Train Your Dragon (+15%), Materialists (+7%), Lilo & Stitch (+16%), Mission: Impossible – Final Reckoning (+22%), Ballerina (+10%), Phoenician Scheme (+6%), and The Life of Chuck (+3%). Top 5 from yesterday: 1.) How to Train Your Dragon (Uni) 4,356 theaters, Thu $9.7M, Wk $123.4M/Wk 1 2.) Lilo & Stitch (Dis) 3,675 (-510) theaters, Thu $2.7M Wk $26M (-45%), Total $376.8M/Wk 4 3.) Materialists (A24) 2,844 theaters, Thu $1.6M, Wk $17.5M/Wk 1 4.) Mission: Impossible – Final Reckoning (Par) 2,942 theaters, Thu $1.5M, Wk $15.8M (-27%), Total $171.8M/Wk 4 5.) Ballerina (LG) 3,409 theaters, Thu $1.1M, $14.1M (-56%), Total $46.5M/Wk 2 EXCLUSIVE: Sony's 28 Years Later is coming in with a preview gross tonight that's well north of $5M, we are hearing from sources. But don't start comping it yet to New Line's box office surprise sequel, Final Destination: Bloodlines which did $5.5M in previews for a franchise best opening of $51.6M. Horror films are frontloaded, duh. Rotten Tomatoes audiences are being pretty hard on this Danny Boyle zombie movie at 67% despite critics giving the installment the best reviews the 23-year old franchise has ever seen at 92%. Final Destination: Bloodlines earned both great reviews and audience exits on Rotten Tomatoes respectively with 92% and 87%. Previews began at noon for 28 Years Later. Tracking spotted this viral infected undead post-apocalyptic movie at an opening between $28M-$30M. The movie reps a return for Boyle as director and Alex Garland as screenwriter after 2002's 28 Days Later. That movie opened to $10M back in the day at 1,261 theaters, while 28 Weeks Later, which was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, opened to $9.8M back in 2007 at 2,303 theaters. Meanwhile, Disney/Pixar's Elio after two nights of previews is looking to be around $2.5M-$3M. That's the amount of preview cash that Pixar's summer 2023 movie, Elemental, banked before an $11.7M Friday and $29.6M opening. Elio is hoping to clear a 3-day between $20M-$25M. No RT audience scores yet, but critics enjoyed it at 86% certified fresh. Those reviews are stronger than Elemental at 73% fresh which wind up with an audience score of 93% and a solid A CinemaScore. As we mentioned, the best advertisement for Elio is the movie itself. In a marketplace where it's hard to launch original animation, the hope is that the Adrian Molina-Madeline Sharafian-Domee Shi directed movie pulls an Elemental and posts some wild multiple of 5x or more (that pic ended its stateside run at $154.4M). As we reported previously, Universal/DreamWorks Animation's How to Train Your Dragon is expected to hold the fort at No. 1 with a second weekend of $40M-plus. Through Wednesday, the Dean DeBlois directed live action take of his animated movie is up to $113.7M. Best of Deadline 2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series 'Stick' Release Guide: When Do New Episodes Come Out?
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Box Office: John Wick Spinoff ‘Ballerina' Opens to Sluggish $25 Million, ‘Lilo & Stitch' Rules With $32.5 Million
Disney's Lilo & Stitch is dancing circles around From the World of John Wick: Ballerina at the domestic box office. Lilo topped the North American chart for the third consecutive weekend with an estimated $32.5 million from 4,185 theaters after clearing the $300 million milestone on Thursday. Through Sunday, the live-action blockbuster's global haul is an estimated $772.6 million, including $335.8 million domestically and $436.8 million overseas. More from The Hollywood Reporter 'Ballerina' Director Len Wiseman Talks Scrapped 'John Wick 3' Connections and the Truth About Additional Photography 'John Wick' Boss Chad Stahelski Gets Candid About Franchise: "My Process Is F***ed" 'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina' Review: Ana de Armas Slays in a Hard-Charging Spinoff That Makes for a Mindless Summer Treat Ballerina, the first John Wick spinoff, opened in second place with a softer-than-expected $25 million from 3,409 venues, the lowest start of any title in the series except for the first John Wick in 2014. Ana de Armas plays the title role in the R-rated action pic, with main franchise star Keanu Reeves also making an appearance. Three weeks ago, Ballerina was tracking to open to $35 million or more. Projections were lowered to $30 million-plus heading into the weekend and even further. The good news: Ballerina nabbed an A- CinemaScore and strong audience scores, both on Rotten Tomatoes (94 percent) and PostTrak, so it could regain its step and have long legs. Lionsgate decided to bank big on its John Wick universe after seeing each subsequent film open to bigger numbers, an almost unheard-of feat. That is, until now. Since Ballerina is a spinoff, expectations were always going to be different, but not to this degree. Lionsgate was looking for it to at least match John Wick: Chapter 2's $30.4 million opening in 2017, not adjusted for inflation. So far, Ballerina is playing decidedly male, or 63 percent, according to PostTrak. Lionsgate and Thunder Road Films / 87Eleven Entertainment say they covered a notable chunk of the $90 million production budget with foreign sales. Set during the events of John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum, the film follows Eve Macarro (de Armas), who is beginning her training in the assassin traditions of the Ruska Roma. Anjelica Huston, Gabriel Byrne, Lance Reddick, Catalina Sandino Moreno and Norman Reedus co-star, with Ian McShane and Reeves also turning up. Directed by Len Wiseman from a script from Shay Hatten, Ballerina is based on characters by Derek Kolstad. There's plenty of competition when it comes to male-skewing action fare, led by Paramount and Skydance's Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning, which, like Lilo & Stitch, is enjoying a strong hold in its third outing (the two event titles opened opened opposite each other over Memorial Day weekend to fuel a record holiday). Final Reckoning, marking Tom Cruise's final turn as spy-with-the-mostest Ethan Hunt, placed third with an estimated $15 million from 3,456 locations for a domestic tally of $149.2 million. Overseas, where it is pulling in even bigger numbers, it earned another $40.7 million for an international haul of $301.2 million and $450.4 million globally. After a softer-than-expected debut last weekend, Sony's Karate Kid: Legends fell off 57 percent or more in its sophomore outing to $8.7 million from 3,859 sites for a muted domestic tally of $35.4 million through Sunday. New Line's Final Destination: Bloodlines, now in its fourth weekend, rounded out the top five with $6.5 million from 3,867 cinemas for a domestic tally of $123.6 million, followed by the nationwide expansion of Wes Anderson's latest film, The Phoenician Scheme, into a total of 1,678 theaters. From Focus Features and Indian Paintbrush, Phoenician Scheme is projecting a $6.3 million weekend for a 10-day cume of $7 million after opening in its first six locations last weekend (it scored the top per-location average of the year to date, of $95,000). A24's horror pic Bring Her back finished in seventh place in its second weekend with an estimated $3.5 million from 2,467 theaters for a domestic cume of $14.1 million, followed by GKIDS' new offering, Dan Da Dan: Evil Eye, with $3.1 million from 2,435 cinemas. June 8, 7:35 a.m.: Updated with revised estimates. This story was originally published June 7 at 8:55 a.m. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now
Yahoo
21-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
‘Sinners' Surges Past ‘Minecraft' at Box Office With $45.6 Million Opening Weekend
After industry estimates had the third weekend of 'A Minecraft Movie' topping the critically acclaimed 'Sinners' at the Easter box office on Saturday morning, the two Warner Bros. films have swapped places atop the box office charts as Ryan Coogler's horror film is now estimated for a $45.6 million opening weekend. Should this result hold, 'Sinners' will pass the $44.3 million opening of Jordan Peele's 2022 film 'Nope' for the highest opening of an original film since the pandemic. Not only is that highly likely, it wouldn't be surprising if the final weekend total for 'Sinners' is higher than this current estimate given that it is enjoying some of the most spectacular critical and audience buzz given to any film in recent memory. It starts with a straight A from opening night audiences on CinemaScore, the first given to a horror film since James Cameron's 'Aliens' in 1986. It then continues with a 5/5 and 84% 'definite recommend' rating on PostTrak and unbelievable Rotten Tomatoes scores of 98% critics and 97% audience. According to PostTrak, about three-fifths of tickets sold for 'Sinners' on Friday were walk-up sales, showing how quickly this incredibly positive word-of-mouth is spreading. As expected for a film from the director of 'Black Panther,' Black audiences are the top demographic at 49% on opening night followed by 27% white and 14% Latino, with extremely high scores across all demos. This strong result isn't enough to get 'Sinners' past the break-even point yet, as it has a reported net $90 million budget before marketing costs. But all signs point to the film legging out extremely well, especially with another weekend of Imax and premium format support still ahead before the arrival of Marvel Studios' 'Thunderbolts.' Along with casual audiences who may heard about the film for the first time thanks to the post-release buzz, there is likely a section of Coogler's fanbase that still hasn't seen the film yet because they are waiting for a convenient time to see it on an Imax screen. Meanwhile, Warner Bros.' other big hit, 'A Minecraft Movie,' is still setting the bar high as 2025's highest grossing film with an excellent $41.3 million third weekend, putting the film's domestic total at $345 million and its global total at $720 million as it is now a lock to cross the $1 billion mark worldwide. After a negative reception to its first trailer last year, the video game adaptation has completely turned things around with family audiences with its meme-driven buzz. As 'Sinners' and 'Minecraft' have dragged the box office out of its deep March slump and account for 64% of this weekend's grosses, they mark a major victory for Warner Bros.' film chiefs Michael De Luca and Pam Abdy, who were facing murmurs in media reports that Warner Discovery CEO David Zaslav was considering replacing them. 'Sinners' in particular is a major victory for the two execs, as it is one of a series of original, auteur-driven films that De Luca and Abdy staked major money on in their efforts to rebuild Warner's image as a filmmaker-friendly studio following the shocking departure of Christopher Nolan to Universal prior to their arrival in 2021. As part of that effort, De Luca and Abdy agreed to extremely favorable terms for Coogler to bring 'Sinners' onto their slate, including returning the film's rights to the director after 25 years. 'As we continue to strive to bring an array of films to moviegoers, we are thrilled to see how Ryan Coogler's original movie 'Sinners,' and a movie based on the fan favorite 'Minecraft' game, have resonated with audiences in such a stellar way,' De Luca and Abdy said in a statement on Sunday. 'Movies have the power to transport us to worlds only seen on the big screen, and Warner Bros. Pictures remains committed to bringing singular in-theater experiences to audiences looking for bold movies, both original and those based on beloved existing properties.' The big original gambles from De Luca and Abdy will continue in the year ahead, as Paul Thomas Anderson's big budget crime drama 'One Battle After Another' hits theaters in late September with a similar level of premium format support as 'Sinners,' followed by Maggie Gyllenhaal's stylized horror film 'The Bride!' in March 2026. Warner Bros. isn't the only studio with reason to celebrate this Easter. Angel Studios' first animated release, 'The King of Kings,' is continuing its strong performance with $17.2 million in its second weekend and a 10-day total of $45.3 million. Christian audiences have shown in recent weeks with the success of Fathom's 'The Chosen: Last Supper' that they have plenty of appetite for cinematic takes on the Gospel and have shown it again as this Mofac Animation production has dropped just 12% from its $19 million opening weekend. 'At Angel, our Angel Guild plays a crucial role in picking winners, and this film is a testament to that vision,' Angel Studios distribution chief Brandon Purdie said in a statement. ''The King of Kings' is an epic, emotional journey made for the big screen. Theaters are responding by making room, and audiences are flocking in droves, speaking loud and clear: they're here for stories that amplify light.' Disney/20th Century's 'The Amateur' and A24's 'Warfare' complete the top 5, with 'The Amateur' grossing $6.8 million in its second weekend. The spy revenge thriller starring Rami Malek is shaping up to be a theatrical dud with $27 million domestic and $64 million worldwide after two weekends against a $60 million budget before marketing. 'Warfare' adds $4.8 million in its second weekend, giving it a $17.1 million total after two weekends. While well received from audiences, its graphic and realistic depiction of the Iraq War is keeping its audience appeal limited as it has yet to break even against its $20 million budget. Thanks in large part to Warner's one-two punch of hits, April has been the drought-buster that theaters have seriously needed as domestic totals for the year reached $2 billion on Sunday. After the first quarter of the year finished nearly 12% behind that of 2024, the year-to-date annual total is now 6.2% ahead of last year's pace while the deficit compared to 2023 levels has reduced from 17% to 14.4%. The post 'Sinners' Surges Past 'Minecraft' at Box Office With $45.6 Million Opening Weekend appeared first on TheWrap.


The Hill
06-04-2025
- Entertainment
- The Hill
Hollywood lands a much-needed box office hit with ‘A Minecraft Movie'
Hollywood needed 'A Minecraft Movie' to be a hit, and it delivered in its opening weekend, significantly narrowing this year's box office deficit. No one guessed just how big it would be. In its first few days in theaters, the movie earned a staggering $157 million in ticket sales from theaters in the U.S. and Canada, according to studio estimates Sunday. Internationally, it's looking at an additional $144 million for a global debut of $301 million. And with school spring breaks ongoing, 'A Minecraft Movie' is just getting started. Not only is it the biggest opening of 2025, 'A Minecraft Movie' also broke the record for a video game adaptation, a distinction previously held by 'The Super Mario Bros. Movie' ($146 million). Going into the weekend, analysts projected 'Minecraft' might hit $80 million. Instead, it nearly doubled that figure. Nothing is guaranteed in the movie business, but an offering based on the best-selling video game of all time makes for a good start. It hardly mattered that the block-based game doesn't exactly have a narrative. Many of its 200 million active monthly players turned out in droves anyway. The PG-rated movie, directed by Jared Hess ('Napoleon Dynamite'), was a co-production of Legendary Entertainment and Warner Bros. It cost a reported $150 million to make, not including marketing and promotion expenses. Jack Black and Jason Momoa lead the ensemble cast (Danielle Brooks, Emma Myers and Sebastian Eugene Hansen). Their characters are transported into an imaginative dimension called the Overworld and need to go on a dangerous, and immensely silly, adventure to get home. Critics were largely mixed on 'A Minecraft Movie,' but audiences gave it a more promising B+ CinemaScore and 4/5 stars in PostTrak exit polls. Men made up around 62% of the audience, and 64% were under the age of 25. Warner Bros. went big on its release, opening the film in 4,263 locations domestically and 36,000 screens internationally. 'Younger audiences love going to the movie theater, believe it or not,' said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. 'We thought this was an audience who would migrate to the small screens, but this is the perfect small screen to big screen alliance. It became a must-see theatrical event. Awareness was off the charts.' Video game adaptations have had some pivotal successes in recent years, including 'The Super Mario Bros. Movie,' the 'Sonic' series and 'Five Nights at Freddy's.' 'Video games were once a genre that had very mixed results at the box office, but the code has finally been cracked,' Dergarabedian said. Second place at this week's box office went to the Jason Statham action pic 'A Working Man,' which added $7.3 million in its second weekend. Third place was occupied by the second installment in the episodic 'The Chosen: Last Supper' series. Part two (made up of episodes three through five) earned $6.7 million over the weekend. The third and final batch of episodes arrive in theaters on April 11. 'Snow White' slid to fourth place in its third weekend, bringing in $6.1 million. It's now made over $168 million globally. It's been a difficult start to 2025 for Hollywood and movie theaters, with disappointments including 'Snow White' and 'Mickey 17.' But one hit can change the tides significantly, especially with in-theater marketing pushes in full swing for the pivotal summer movie season, which kicks off the first weekend in May. Before this weekend, the box office was running at a 13% deficit compared with last year. Now the gap is down to 5%.

Associated Press
06-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Associated Press
Hollywood lands a much-needed box office hit with ‘A Minecraft Movie'
Hollywood needed 'A Minecraft Movie' to be a hit, and it delivered in its opening weekend, significantly narrowing this year's box office deficit. No one guessed just how big it would be. In its first few days in theaters, the movie earned a staggering $157 million in ticket sales from theaters in the U.S. and Canada, according to studio estimates Sunday. Internationally, it's looking at an additional $144 million for a global debut of $301 million. And with school spring breaks ongoing, 'A Minecraft Movie' is just getting started. Not only is it the biggest opening of 2025, 'A Minecraft Movie' also broke the record for a video game adaptation, a distinction previously held by 'The Super Mario Bros. Movie' ($146 million). Going into the weekend, analysts projected 'Minecraft' might hit $80 million. Instead, it nearly doubled that figure. Nothing is guaranteed in the movie business, but an offering based on the best-selling video game of all time makes for a good start. It hardly mattered that the block-based game doesn't exactly have a narrative. Many of its 200 million active monthly players turned out in droves anyway. The PG-rated movie, directed by Jared Hess ('Napoleon Dynamite'), was a co-production of Legendary Entertainment and Warner Bros. It cost a reported $150 million to make, not including marketing and promotion expenses. Jack Black and Jason Momoa lead the ensemble cast (Danielle Brooks, Emma Myers and Sebastian Eugene Hansen). Their characters are transported into an imaginative dimension called the Overworld and need to go on a dangerous, and immensely silly, adventure to get home. Critics were largely mixed on 'A Minecraft Movie,' but audiences gave it a more promising B+ CinemaScore and 4/5 stars in PostTrak exit polls. Men made up around 62% of the audience, and 64% were under the age of 25. Warner Bros. went big on its release, opening the film in 4,263 locations domestically and 36,000 screens internationally. 'Younger audiences love going to the movie theater, believe it or not,' said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. 'We thought this was an audience who would migrate to the small screens, but this is the perfect small screen to big screen alliance. It became a must-see theatrical event. Awareness was off the charts.' Video game adaptations have had some pivotal successes in recent years, including 'The Super Mario Bros. Movie,' the 'Sonic' series and 'Five Nights at Freddy's.' 'Video games were once a genre that had very mixed results at the box office, but the code has finally been cracked,' Dergarabedian said. Second place at this week's box office went to the Jason Statham action pic 'A Working Man,' which added $7.3 million in its second weekend. Third place was occupied by the second installment in the episodic 'The Chosen: Last Supper' series. Part two (made up of episodes three through five) earned $6.7 million over the weekend. The third and final batch of episodes arrive in theaters on April 11. 'Snow White' slid to fourth place in its third weekend, bringing in $6.1 million. It's now made over $168 million globally. It's been a difficult start to 2025 for Hollywood and movie theaters, with disappointments including 'Snow White' and 'Mickey 17.' But one hit can change the tides significantly, especially with in-theater marketing pushes in full swing for the pivotal summer movie season, which kicks off the first weekend in May.