A Big Bold Beautiful Journey: Box-Office Bomb, Starring

‘A Big Bold Beautiful Journey’ Bombs With $3.5 Million

A Big Bold Beautiful Journey

Him, a sports thriller about a football player training to be the greatest won’t be the box office G.O.A.T. after all.

The film opened behind expectations with $13.5 million from 3,168 North American venues.

Those ticket sales weren’t enough to dethrone last weekend’s champ, “Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle.” After a close race for No. 1, the anime smash from Sony-owned Crunchyroll easily ruled again at the domestic box office with $17.3 million in its second frame.

Him also opened at the international box office, where it bombed with $400,000 from 25 markets. That brings the film’s global tally to $13.86 million. “Him” cost $27 million and won’t require a ton to turn a theatrical profit. That’s the good news. The bad news is that critics and audiences rejected the film (it was saddled with a 28% Rotten Tomatoes average and “C-” grade on CinemaScore), which will hurt word-of-mouth during its big screen run. Produced by Jordan Peele and directed by Justin Tipping, the psychological thriller follows an aging quarterback (Marlon Wayans) who trains a rising football star (Tyriq Withers) to some chilling consequences.

“Producer Jordan Peele name is featured throughout the campaign, but the movie is not being received well,” says analyst David A. Gross of Entertainment Research. “A ‘C’- indicates some dissatisfaction.

A Big Bold Beautiful Journey bombed in sixth place at box-office with $3.5 million from 3,330 venues.

The star power of Margot Robbie and Colin Farrell couldn’t overcompensate for terrible reviews (38% Rotten Tomatoes average) and bad buzz (“B-” grade on CinemaScore polls), meaning “a big bold beautiful journey” likely won’t describe the film’s box office run.
The movie serves as proof to those claiming that there are no longer reliable bankabe stars.
“A Big Bold Beautiful Journey” opened behind soft expectations of $8 to $10 million. The movie also stumbled internationally with $4.5 million from 45 markets for a bleak $8 million worldwide total.
After Yang filmmaker Kogonada directed from a script by screenwriter Seth Reiss (“The Menu”). The R-rated film, about two single strangers who meet at wedding and get to relive important moments from their pasts, cost $45 million!.
“That’s a big number to recoup,” says Gross, considering that “reviews are not good and the audience score is lukewarm.”

So far, “Demon Slayer” has generated $103 million domestically to stand as the biggest anime film in North American box office history. Although ticket sales collapsed by roughly 75% from its record-breaking $70 million debut, this weekend’s $17.3 million tally is notable because those returns would have been impressive in its initial frame. The film, which is being released elsewhere by Aniplex and Toho, has also officially become the highest-grossing anime film in the rest of the world with $451 million internationally and $555 million worldwide. “Infinity Castle” is the first in a trilogy about a boy who becomes a demon slayer to avenge his family and find a cure for his sister, who was turned into a demon. Hype for the initial cinematic adventure certainly bodes well for the two follow-up films.

The Long Walk declined 46% from its debut, marking a decent hold for the modestly priced film. “The Long Walk,” a thriller about teens who participate in a brutal contest where they must continuously walk or die, has generated $22.7 million domestically against a $20 million production budget.

Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale declined by 66% from its first weekend. The film, backed by Focus Features and designed to bid farewell to the franchise that started with television and spawned several theatrical adventures, has grossed $31.6 million in North America and $59.5 million worldwide. The first “Downton Abbey” movie was hugely successful with $96 million domestically and $194 million worldwide. That film was released in 2019, a completely different era at the box office. The 2022 sequel, “A New Era,” debuted after COVID upended the theatrical landscape and ultimately earned $44 million in North America and $92.6 million globally.
The Angel Studios sports drama The Senior opened at No. 7 with a soft $2.7 million from 2,405 theaters. The inspirational true story follows a man of 59, who becomes a college football linebacker. Audiences embraced the PG-rated film with an “A” grade on CinemScore exit polls.

Overall box office returns are 4.4% ahead of 2024, while still more than 22% behind 2019, according to Comscore.

Coming Attractions: DiCaprio and Taylor Swift

The next two weekends should provide a boost as Paul Thomas Anderson’s action epic “One Battle After Another,” starring DiCaprio, and Taylor Swift’s newly announced “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl,” land on the big screen.

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