Madea melts down ‘Geostorm’ and ‘Snowman’ at box office
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Don’t be surprised to find “Happy Death Day” climbing back up the box office charts next week as three very low reviewed films entered this week with Tyler Perry taking his usual one-week number 1 spot with his Madea franchise.
“Tyer Perry’s Boo 2! A Madea Halloween” ranked 8% on Rotten Tomatoes, “Geostorm” has 12% and Michael Fassbender’s “The Snowman” was in the middle at 9%. This latter was so bad we couldn’t even find ourselves willing to push the free merchandise their distributor kept trying to push on us to promote a film contest giveaway. We love Fassbender, but even he must be looking down when someone mentions this hot mess of a movie.
As we reported last week, “Happy Death Day” should do well in October as there’s not much strong competition to knock it below the top 5 spot.
A church lady you don’t want to mess with, a group of elite firefighters, an alcoholic detective, some do-gooder Texans and a renegade scientific genius walked into multiplexes on Friday.
Only one grabbed the attention of ticket buyers.
“Tyler Perry’s Boo 2! A Madea Halloween,” with Mr. Perry reprising his gun-toting, moralizing granny, took in about $21.7 million at North American theaters over the weekend. That total gave Mr. Perry his sixth No. 1 opening, bolstering his status as one of the most reliable crowd pullers in moviedom. Even so, initial ticket sales for “Boo 2” (Lionsgate) fell 24 percent behind those for “Boo! A Madea Halloween” last year. “Boo 2” cost roughly $24 million to make.
Made for a reported $25 million, Perry’s film drew a mostly older and female audience, who gave it an A- CinemaScore. “Boo 2!” did a little less business than the first film, which opened to $28.5 million just last year.
“Given that it’s a sequel, its performance is at the higher end of our expectations,” said David Spitz, who heads up domestic distribution for Lionsgate.
The studio expects the film to hold well into next weekend due to increased interest because of Halloween, but it will also face some competition with the horror pic “Jigsaw.”
Ticket sales were terrible for the other newcomers — “Geostorm,” “Only the Brave,” “The Snowman” and “Same Kind of Different as Me” — adding to worries that moviegoing is falling out of fashion, as Americans curl up at home with their Netflix accounts. On the other hand, all of those films but one, “Only the Brave,” a dramatization of a wildfire that killed 19 responders, received abysmal reviews.
But a slight drop for a sequel hardly compares to the catastrophe of “Geostorm,” a long-delayed $120 million disaster epic starring Gerard Butler that only managed to open to $13.3 million from North American theaters.
A co-production between Skydance Media and Warner Bros. Pictures, “Geostorm” marks the directorial debut of “Independence Day” producer Dean Devlin. The film was shot back in late 2014 and lousy test screenings resulted in $15 million of reshoots, pushing back the release over a year and a half.
But the reshoots didn’t seem to help the final product, which has been widely panned by critics and shunned overall by audiences. Those who did turn out gave it a B- CinemaScore.
“Geostorm” (Warner Bros.) was second for the weekend, taking in an estimated $13.3 million, a failing total for a film that cost roughly $130 million to make, not including tens of millions of dollars in marketing costs, and was released in 3,246 theaters. “Geostorm,” starring Gerard Butler as a scientist racing to save the planet from environmental destruction, likely suffered from a sense of been-there, done-that, coming across as another “The Day After Tomorrow.”
“Geostorm” was co-financed by Skydance Media, a company founded by the Oracle heir David Ellison.
Next among the newcomers was “Only the Brave,” which collected about $6 million, according to comScore, which compiles box office data. Black Label Media, a company co-founded by the FedEx heiress Molly Smith, spent about $38 million to make this firefighter drama, which was distributed by Sony Pictures Entertainment. (It has been a bad month for the FedEx family at the movies: Alcon, backed by Ms. Smith’s father, Fred Smith, had a major box office misfire with “Blade Runner 2049.”)
Another possibly too-timely film, “Only the Brave,” about the Granite Mountain Hotshots who took on the June 2013 Yarnell Hill Fire, also failed to attract sufficient audiences this weekend. The Sony film starring Josh Brolin, Jeff Bridges, and Jennifer Connelly opened in fifth place with $6 million.
At $38 million, the production budget was more reasonable than “Geostorm,” however.
But despite good reviews, it opened behind two holdovers — the horror pic “Happy Death Day” which landed in third place with $9.4 million and “Blade Runner 2049″ which took in $7.2 million in its third weekend in theaters.
Universal and Working Title’s “The Snowman,” starring Michael Fassbender and based on the Jo Nesbo book, also failed to make a splash. The critically derided pic debuted in eighth place with $3.4 million from 1,812 theaters.
The director, Thomas Alfredson has been widely acknowledging the film’s shortcomings and confusing plot in the press, saying that they did not have time to shoot the entire script. Audiences gave it a deathly D CinemaScore.
Things looked a little brighter for the limited releases this weekend. Both playing in four theaters, the Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman film “The Killing of a Sacred Deer,” took in $114,585 and “Wonderstruck,” starring Julianne Moore,” earned $68,762.
“As great as September was, October has been really scary,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for comScore.
Theatrical exhibitors and studio distribution heads are gathering in Miami Beach, Florida this week for the ShowEast Film Expo to discuss the state of moviegoing and it couldn’t come at a better time when old truisms about what works and what doesn’t work at the box office are being challenged weekly.
Dergarabedian said even releasing a quality film isn’t a sure path to success anymore.
“Even well-reviewed movies like ‘American Made,’ ‘Only the Brave’ and ‘Blade Runner 2049’ are having trouble gaining traction,” Dergarabedian said.
The industry will be looking to the big event films, like “Thor: Ragnarok,” out Nov. 3, “Justice League” and “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” to get the year back to even.
“Trying to figure out audiences and what they want is the key to the future. Audiences are voting with their presence or absence at the movie theater,” Dergarabedian said. “They’re staying away now, but that might change in two weeks.”
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to comScore. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.
“Boo 2! A Madea Halloween,” $21.7 million.
“Geostorm,” $13.3 million ($36.4 million international).
“Happy Death Day,” $9.4 million ($6.5 million international).
“Blade Runner 2049,” $7.2 million ($14.3 million international).
“Only the Brave,” $6 million.
“The Foreigner,” $5.5 million ($2.7 million international).
“It,” $3.5 million ($12.8 million international).
“The Snowman,” $3.4 million ($6.6 million international).
“American Made,” $3.2 million ($2.7 million international).
“Kingsman: The Golden Circle,” $3 million ($48.7 million international).
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada), according to comScore:
“Kingsman: The Golden Circle,” $48.7 million.
“Geostorm,” $36.4 million.
“Never Say Die,” $15 million.
“Blade Runner 2049,” $14.3 million.
“It,” $12.8 million.
“Bad Genius,” $7.6 million.
“The Outlaws,” $6.8 million.
“The Snowman,” $6.6 million.
“Happy Death Day,” $6.5 million.
“The Lego Ninjago Movie,” $4.7 million.
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