ReportWire

Tag: box office

  • ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’ Falls to ‘Avatar 3’ with Soft $15M MLK Weekend Opening

    28 Years Later: The Bone Temple is coming in behind expectations as the sole new wide entry at the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday box office, where holdover Avatar: Fire and Ash will win the four-day weekend.

    Sony’s The Bone Temple is looking to notch $15 million during the four-day frame, and a $13 million three-day number. That’s far behind the first 28 Years, which opened to a $30 million three-day number in June, and behind the $20 million four-day number projected for Bone Temple going into the weekend.

    Avatar 3, now in its fifth weekend, is expected to win with a $17 million four-day figure. So far, the film has collected $353.4 million domestically and more than $1.23 billion globally.

    The 28 Years Later franchise hails from director Boyle and writer Alex Garland, who brought the film series to Sony after a heated bidding war. Filmmaker Nia DaCosta is in the director’s chair for Bone Temple, the second part in a planned trilogy, with Sony saying last month that it will make a third installment with Cillian Murphy — star of the original 28 Days Later — with Boyle returning to direct. It is not known how this opening weekend could change that calculus.

    Sony insiders are hopeful that word of mouth could give Bone Temple legs. The feature earned strong reviews (94 percent on Rotten Tomatoes), an A- CinemaScore (a rare high grade for a horror film) and a 4.5 PostTrak rating. Bone Temple stars Ralph Fiennes, Jack O’Connell, Alfie Williams, Erin Kellyman and Chi Lewis-Parry.

    Disney Animation’s animated juggernaut Zootopia 2 became the top-grossing animated film of all time globally, topping Disney and Pixar’s Inside Out 2, and the No. 9 highest grossing film of all time with $1.313 billion global haul. It ends its eighth weekend at the domestic box office in the No. 3 spot with a projected $11.6 million for the four-day frame.

    Lionsgate’s The Housemaid fell just 22 percent in its fifth weekend, and is expected to come in fourth place with $10.1 million for the four-day frame, bringing its domestic haul to $108.7 million.

    Filmmaker Josh Safdie’s Marty Supreme lands at No. 5. It has been an overperformer since its Christmas release, and observers were curious if it would get a bump following Timothée Chalamet’s best actor win at the Globes. It looks to bring in around $6.9 million for the four-day frame, which would bring the domestic total to a winning $80 million.

    And Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet expands after it took home best drama at the Golden Globes Jan. 11, with Oscar contender Jesse Buckley winning the actress prize. The film, which opened in limited release over Thanksgiving, upped its count to 718 theaters this weekend and is expected to bring in $1.6 million for the four-day frame, bringing its domestic total to $15 million. Focus Features plans further expansion after Oscar nominations are announced.

    Jan. 18, 8:30 a.m.: Updated with Sunday figures.

    This story was original published on Jan. 17 at 8:15 a.m.

    Aaron Couch

    Source link

  • ‘Godzilla Minus Zero’ Sets November Release in Theaters

    The sequel to sleeper hit Godzilla Minus One has set a date to rampage into North American theaters. It will arrive on Nov. 6 via distributor GKids. The date follows quickly on the heels of Godzilla owner Toho releasing the feature in Japan on Nov. 3.

    As previously revealed, the sequel will be titled Godzilla Minus Zero. No casting details are yet available, but the first movie took place in post-World War II Japan and centered on a Kamikaze pilot Koichi (Ryunokuke Kamiki), who lives in shame after choosing not to die in battle. But he ultimately finds redemption as he helps his nation deal with the monster known as Godzilla.

    Godzilla Minus One was one of the surprise success stories of 2023. Made for just $15 million, it grossed $113 million worldwide and took home the Oscar for best visual effects — the first Academy Award for the franchise in its 70-year history. It earned praise from all over Hollywood and counts Steven Spielberg as an avid fan.

    It also stands as the highest grossing live-action Japanese film in North American theaters, with the original color version released in December 2023, followed by a black and white version in January 2024.

    Filmmaker Takashi Yamazaki, who was among the team that took home the VFX Oscar, returns for the sequel.

    “So far from Hollywood, even the possibility of standing on this stage seemed out of reach,” Yamazaki said during his Oscars speech. “The moment we were nominated, we felt like Rocky Balboa welcomed into the ring as equals by our biggest rivals, which was already a miracle. But, here we stand!”

    [ad_2] Aaron Couch
    Source link

  • André Ovredal Horror Movie Gets Title, Release Date from Paramount

    The next horror movie from André Ovredal is coming into focus.

    Paramount has revealed the film is called Passenger, and has set a plum summer theatrical date of May 29 for the project, which stars Jacob Scipio, Lou Llobell and Melissa Leo. Plot details are being kept in luggage.

    Walter Hamada is producing via 18Hz, alongside Gary Dauberman and his Coin Operated banner.

    Ovredal last helmed The Last Voyage of the Demeter, his own take on the Dracula mythos, and is known for projects such as the Guillermo del Toro-produced Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.

    Passenger currently has the May 29 date to itself, but is flanked by Disney and Lucasfilm’s Mandalorian & Grogu (May 22) and Masters of the Universe (June 5).

    Paramount and producer Hamada are preparing to unleash Primate, a Jan. 9 horror feature about things going very wrong with a pet chimp.

    Aaron Couch

    Source link

  • Box Office: ‘Avatar 3’ Dominates Christmas With $88M for $760M Global Crown, ‘Marty Surpreme’ Another Win for Timothée Chalamet

    James Cameron’s Avatar: Fire and Ash dominated the long Christmas weekend with a four-day earnings of $88 million, including $64 million for the three-day weekend proper.

    While it’s lagging behind the last film at the same point its run, Fire & Ash is still a monster, grossing another $181.2 million overseas for a global tally of $760.4 million through Sunday, including $217.7 million domestically and $542.7 million overseas. And with a week to go before the holidays are officially wrapped, it should be at $1 billion by the end of next weekend.

    That would give Disney dominion over the only three 2025 movies that crossed $1 billion at the 2025 worldwide box office behind Zootopia 2, which — no joke — placed No. 2 over for the three-day weekend proper with $20 million all the way in its fifth outing and Lilo & Stitch. While this is all great news for Disney, it’s a sobering reminder as to why domestic box office revenue for 2025, which came in behind 2024 at $8.8 billion.

    It wasn’t for a lack of trying. There were too few events pics, although the eclectic mix of presents under the Christmas Day tree resulted in the best holiday in terms of overall revenue since the pandemic.

    A24’s high-profile period pic Marty Supreme — starring Timothée Chalamet as a 1950s table tennis champion — was the biggest surprise in grabbing second place over the four-day weekend $27.1 million, the best opening in the history of the indie studio.

    In a surprise upset, Chalamet’s film easily came in ahead of Sony’s Anaconda, which also opened on Dec. 25. The Jack Black-Paul Rudd film, skewered by critics, opened to $23.6 million domestically over the four-day holiday weekend for a global start of $43.7 million, in line with expectations.

    Marty Supreme began made headlines the weekend before Christmas with a record-breaking per-location average of $145,913 across six locations in New York City and L.A., the best in A24’s history and the best of any film since 2016’s La La Land. Sporting a pricey budget of $60 million to $70 million, it is reportedly the most expensive movie ever made by the indie studio. (Period pics are expensive!)

    In his review for THR, chief critic David Rooney says Marty Supreme reinvents the sports comedy. “Marking the first time since his 2008 solo debut that Josh Safdie has directed a feature without his brother and longtime collaborator Benny, Marty Supreme turns out, paradoxically, to be his most Safdian movie to date. Propelled by a hot-wired Timothée Chalamet as a cocky operator aiming for global table tennis glory, this genre-defying original is an exhilarating sports comedy, a scrappy character study, a thrumming evocation of early ‘50s New York City — plus a reimagining of all those things. Think of it as Uncut Gems meets Catch Me If You Can and maybe you’re halfway there.”

    Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion and Tyler, the Creator also star in this tale of an aspiring table tennis champion angling to ping pong his way out of 1950s Lower East Side Manhattan.

    Chalamet has stopped at nothing to help market the movie — including becoming the first person to stand atop The Sphere in Las Vegas — and it appears to be paying off. In the weeks leading up to the film’s release, he wrote and directed a staged Zoom call with A24’s marketing team in which he presented increasingly ridiculous ideas to promote Marty Supreme. One of the ideas presented actually became reality: fly a bright orange rented blimp with the movie’s title imprinted on each side. While there was talk of a cross-country tour, the blimp is based in the Los Angeles area. The Zoom also resulted in the idea for Safdie and the cast to light the Empire State Building orange ahead of the New York premiere.

    The big question facing Marty Supreme is whether it can break out and play to mainstream audiences, versus the more traditional specialty crowd.

    Other Christmas victors included Lionsgate’s The Housemaid, starring Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried, and Angel Studios’ faith-based David is headed for an impressive fifth-place finish after posting an opening-day gross of $4.6 million on Dec. 25.

    Christmas Day falling on a Thursday is a dream scenario for theater owners, since the long holiday weekend will be free and clear. And the week between Christmas and New Year’s is one of the most lucrative for moviegoing, considering that schools and colleges are closed, with many adults off from work as well.

    More to come.

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • Box Office: ‘Marty Supreme’ Almost Beats ‘Anaconda’ in Christmas Eve Surprise; ‘Avatar 3’ Jumps $500M Globally

    A second batch of holiday movies is opening nationwide on Christmas Day in North America, including A24’s high-profile period pic Marty Supreme — starring Timothée Chalamet as a 1950s table tennis champion who will do whatever it takes — and Sony’s Jack Black-Paul Rudd campy monster reboot Anaconda.

    Marty Supreme made headlines last weekend with a record-breaking per-location average of $145,913 across six locations in New York City and L.A., the best in A24’s history and the best of any film since 2016’s La La Land. Sporting a pricey budget of $60 million to $70 million, it is reportedly the most expensive movie ever made by the esteemed indie studio.

    Both films launched in previews on Christmas Eve before expanding everywhere on Thursday, with Anaconda earning an estimated $2.1 million, versus $2.01 million for Marty Supreme. Anaconda is arguably the more commercial offering and is projecting a four-day Christmas weekend north of $20 million. However, the reboot has been skewered by critics. Its ranking on Rotten Tomatoes is presently a rotten 44 percent, compared to a 95 percent fresh rating for Chalamet film (audience scores won’t be posted until tonight or tomorrow.

    In his review for THR, chief critic David Rooney says Marty Supreme reinvents the sports comedy. “Marking the first time since his 2008 solo debut that Josh Safdie has directed a feature without his brother and longtime collaborator Benny, Marty Supreme turns out, paradoxically, to be his most Safdian movie to date. Propelled by a hot-wired Timothée Chalamet as a cocky operator aiming for global table tennis glory, this genre-defying original is an exhilarating sports comedy, a scrappy character study, a thrumming evocation of early ‘50s New York City — plus a reimagining of all those things. Think of it as Uncut Gems meets Catch Me If You Can and maybe you’re halfway there.

    Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion and Tyler, the Creator also star in this tale of an aspiring table tennis champion angling to ping pong his way out of 1950s Lower East Side Manhattan

    Chalamet has stopped at nothing to help market the movie — culminating with becoming the first person to stand atop The Sphere in Las Vegas on Dec. 22 — and it appears to be paying off. In the weeks leading up to the film’s release, he wrote and directed a staged Zoom call with A24’s marketing team in which he presented increasingly ridiculous ideas to promote Marty Supreme. One of the ideas presented actually became reality: fly a bright orange rented blimp with the movie’s title imprinted on each side. While there was talk of a cross-country tour, the blimp is based in the Los Angeles area. And the idea for Safdie and the cast to light the Empire State Building orange ahead of the New York premiere also emerged from something said in the staged Zoom call.

    The big question facing Marty Supreme is whether it can break out and play to mainstream audiences, versus the more traditional specialty crowd.

    And, according to Angie Han’s Anaconda review for THR, “An action-comedy starring Jack Black, Paul Rudd and a giant CG snake should be way more fun. Director Tom Gormican’s meta-take on the previous Anaconda films follows a director (Black) and his crew as they travel to the Amazon to make the defining movie about the storied monster. Thandiwe Newton and Steve Zahn co-star.

    Of course, the overall winner of the holiday box office contest will be Avatar 3, which is crossing the $500 million mark on Christmas Day after topping Wednesday’s domestic chart with another $10.7 million for a North American tally of $129.2 million. Overseas, it added $11 million for a foreign tally of $353.6 million — including $71 million from China— for a worldwide haul of $483.3 million through Wednesday. And Disney Animation’s Zootopia 2 is still going strong after opening at Thanksgiving, helping to propel the studio past the $6 billion mark in global ticket sales for the first time since 2019, prior to the pandemic.

    Elsewhere on Wednesday’s domestic chart, Angel Studio’s faith-based David placed third with $2.6 million, followed by Paramount’s The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants ($1.8 million) and Lionsgate’s femme-skewing thriller The Housemaid ($1.8 million), starring Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried. All three films opened opposite Avatar on the 19th, followed by the Dec. 25 entries.

    Christmas Day falling on a Thursday is a dream scenario for theater owners, since the long holiday weekend will be free and clear. And the final two weeks of the year are the most lucrative for moviegoing, considering that schools and colleges are closed, with many adults off from work as well.

    .

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • Box Office: ‘Avatar 3’ Rings Out Very Merry Year for Disney, Studio Hits $6 Billion in Global Revenue in a Post-Pandemic First

    While overall box office revenue won’t make any gains in 2025, the same can’t be said of Disney.

    The studios sprawling film empire on Wednesday will cross the $6 billion mark in global box office revenue for the year, having earned $5.967 billion globally through Tuesday, including $2.310 billion domestically and $3.656 billion internationally.  

    This marks the first time Disney has hit $6 billion since 2019, just before the pandemic struck and decimated moviegoing. Even before COVID, clearing $6 billion was no easy feat. No other studio has done so since 2015, while Disney is a now a five-time multiple offender (2016-2019, 2025).

    Disney’s success this year has been fueled by 16 wide releases, led by the only two titles that have crossed $1 billion at the worldwide box office: Zootopia 2, which has earned $1.311 billion to date, and Lilo & Stitch, which topped out at $1.038 billion earlier this year. Thanks to some nifty math, Disney is also reporting that three Marvel Studios’ titles have collectively grossed more than $1.3 billion worldwide, even if not one title did so on its own; The Fantastic Four: First Steps, Thunderbolts* and Captain America: Brave New World.

    Other titles helping to propel Disney past $6 billion were Predator: Badlands, Freakier Friday and Elio, albeit at much smaller numbers.

    James Cameron‘s Avatar: Fire and Ash is the icing on the cake, grossing $450.1 million at the global box office after only seven days in release, including worldwide earnings of $51 million on Tuesday. In North America, it topped Tuesday’s chart with $16.5 million for a domestic tally of $119 million. Overseas, it finished the day with a foreign tally of $331.1 million.

    Avatar 3 is easily expected to dominate the long Christmas weekend (Thursday-Sunday) with a four-day gross of $70 million to $75 million, if not more. Sony’s comedic adventure Anaconda, teaming Jack Black and Paul Rudd, opens nationwide on Dec. 25 alongside Timothée Chalamet‘s Marty Supreme and Focus Features’ music-infused Song Sing Blue, starring Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson. They join a crop of films opening last weekend that wanted to a jump on the holiday. In addition to Avatar, these include Lionsgate’s femme-skewing The Housemaid, starring Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried; Angel Studios’ faith-based David; and Paramount’s The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants, which still hopes to hunt down families after a soft debut.

    Anaconda, Song Sing Blue, and Marty Supreme — which is expanding nationwide after opening in New York and L.A. last weekend to supremely impressive numbers after a massive marketing blitz by its leading man — will all hold Wednesday previews before opening everywhere on Christmas Day, which can be a busy day for moviegoing once presents are unwrapped.

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • Box Office: Ridley Scott’s ‘The Dog Stars’ Pushed to Late Summer 2026; Pixar’s ‘Gatto’ Moves Up to Spring 2027

    Ridley Scott‘s thriller feature The Dog Stars has booked a new release date in theaters. Instead of opening on March 27, 2026, it will now ride into theaters on Aug. 28, 2026.

    Disney’s film empire announced the shift on Monday, along with a handful of other changes to its release calendar for next year and 2027.

    Searchlight’s Ready or Not 2: Here I Come is taking the March 27 date vacated by Dog Stars (it had been set to open on April 10, 2026).

    The other notable change involves moving up the release of Pixar‘s original pic Gatto from June 17, 2027, to March 5, 2027, the beginning of spring break. Pixar chief creative officer Peter Docter announced the brand-new animation feature when presenting the animation studio’s slate — which also includes Hoppers and Toy Story 5 — during Pixar’s presentation at the Annecy international animation film festival earlier this year.

    Gatto, to be directed by Luca filmmaker Enrico Casarosa, follows Nero, a water-hating black cat living in the picturesque city of Venice, Italy, who befriends Maya, a lonely street musician. Docter gave a sneak peek at the first animated tests and character drawings for the movie at Annecy.

    From 20th Century, The Dog Stars centers on a civilian pilot living on an abandoned airbase with his dog and an ex-Marine amid a devastating pandemic. A random transmission picked up by the pilot’s radio from his 1956 Cessna offers hope for a better life.

    Jacob Elordi signed on to star as the pilot after Paul Mescal left the project. Mark L. Smith wrote the script, adapting Peter Heller’s 2012 apocalyptic novel of the same name.

    Ready or Not: Here I Come sees Sarah Michelle Gellar and Elijah Wood join series star Samara Weaving. Radio Silence’s Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett are back to direct the follow-up, as are writers Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy.

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • ‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ Gets Off To a Hot Theatrical Start

    We all knew Avatar: Fire and Ash was hitting just before Christmas as the big movie of the holiday season, so now we’re just waiting to see how much it makes.

    Already, it’s off to a solid start, making $345 million worldwide in its opening weekend. Per the Hollywood Reporter, it’s the second-best Hollywood open of 2025 behind Zootopia 2, even as its $88 million domestic take is on the low end of projections, which pegged between $85 million and $95 million. Even so, it’s doing gangbusters internationally, and the last two movies had long tails during their theatrical runs. The first Avatar and The Way of Water were the top movies in North America for seven weeks each, continually making money, so there’s a good chance that continues for a third time.

    One thing lacking from Fire and Ash that benefitted Way of Water is time: there was a 13-year gap between the first two Avatar movies, while this one just has three. It’s even more of a known entity now than pre-2022, made clear by both the From the Ashes expansion for Ubisoft’s 2023 game Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora meant to coincide with the film’s release and Miley Cyrus’ recent single. As such, there might be a sense of newness missing for Fire and Ash, even as it’s racking up solid reviews and very good impressions from audiences.

    Director James Cameron has acknowledged this, saying that if he doesn’t end up making those fourth and fifth movies, he’s already got a backup plan. And it probably also helps that reactions have noted how much Ash feels like a closer in its own right, so it’s not like the franchise will abruptly die—but it may have to work a little harder to reach its own box office heights.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Justin Carter

    Source link

  • ‘Avatar 3’ Box Office: James Cameron’s Saga Opens on Low End in U.S. With $88M, But Race Is Far From Over

    James Cameron’s third installment in his groundbreaking Avatar series minted green at multiplexes around the globe over the weekend as the year-end holiday box office commenced in earnest.

    Avatar: Fire And Ash, from 20th Century and Disney, amassed $345 million in its worldwide opening, the second-best global opening of any 2025 Hollywood title behind fellow Disney Thanksgiving tentpole Zootopia 2. And it’s coming in almost No. 1 everywhere, even winning over tough markets including much of Asia and Latin America, where sci-fi can struggle. One surprise — it came in on the lower end of expectations in North America with $88 million.

    The male-skewing film is earning strong audience exits — including an A CinemaScore, in line with the two previous films — despite its running time of more than three and a quarter hours. Disney insiders say this puts the threequel in the driver’s seat.

    The first Avatar movie was all but lambasted when it opened to $77 million in 2009, considering its cost, but the angst soon ended as the film picked up momentum on its way to becoming the top-grossing film of all time at the worldwide box office with an astounding $2.97 billion, not adjusted for inflation. It still holds that honor, followed by Marvel’s: Avengers: Endgame and two more Cameron titlesWay of Water and Titanic.

    Heading into this weekend, many tracking services had Fire and Ash crossing $100 million domestically, if not more, considering that Way of Water opened domestically to $134 million. Pundits have since come to believe Way of Water benefited from a great pent-up demand.

    Also, Way of Water had nine full days of play before the Christmas holiday, while Fire and Ash had six days, with the theory being that some audiences will wait to see the movie until preparations are done and presents unwrapped. All at the same time, threequels can sometimes struggle.

    Two movies in particular, possibly taking a bite out of Avatar: Fire and Ash over its opening weekend, were the faith-based David, from Angel Studios. The pic debuted to $22 million, a career-high for Angel.

    Lionsgate’s R-rated thriller The Housemaid, starring Amanda Seyfried and Sydney Sweeney, followed in third place with $19 million. The film, a throwback to the 1990s, could be a key test for Sweeney following her failed Oscar hopeful, Christy, and launched in third place with $19 million.

    Also opening nationwide over the Dec. 19-21 weekend was Paramount’s family pic The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants, which had to settle for a fifth-place finish with $16 million.

    More to come.

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • ‘Avatar’ Box Office: James Cameron’s Epic Firing Up $85M-$95M U.S. Bow, Crosses $100M Globally

    James Cameron‘s highly anticipated Avatar: Fire and Ash delivered an opening day of $36.5 million, putting the sci-fi epic on course for a domestic debut in the $85 million to $95 million range. Friday’s haul included more than $11 million in previews.

    Overseas, where it began opening in select markets midweek, the 20th Century and Disney tentpole has already grossed $100 million, including a stellar opening day of $17 million in China. The male-skewing film is earning strong audience exits — including an A CinemaScore, in line with the two previous films — despite its running time of more than three and a quarter hours.

    Avatar: The Way of Water opened to $134 million in 2022, but there was a tremendous pent-up demand, considering the first Avatar debuted all the way back in 2009. Also, Way of Water had nine full days of play before the Christmas holiday, while Fire and Ash had six days, with the theory being that some audiences will wait to see the movie until preparations are done and presents unwrapped.

    The first Avatar was all but lambasted when it opened to $77 million in 2009, but the angst soon ended as the film picked up momentum on its way to becoming the top-grossing film of all time at the worldwide box office with an astounding $2.97 billion, not adjusted for inflation. It still holds that honor, followed by Marvel’s: Avengers: Endgame and two more Cameron titles, Way of Water and Titanic.

    Avatar: Fire and Ash isn’t the only movie pulling up an early seat at this year’s holiday feast.

    Also opening nationwide over the Dec. 19-21 weekend are Paramount’s family pic The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants, which is looking at a muted debut in the mid-teens, while Lionsgate’s R-rated thriller The Housemaid, starring Amanda Seyfried and Sydney Sweeney, is in a close race for second place. The film, a throwback to the 1990s, will be a key test for Sweeney following her failed Oscar hopeful, Christy, and is hoping for a launch in the $20 million to $24 million range after earning $8 million on Friday.

    The Angel Studios animated faith-based feature David is also tracking in the $20 million to $23 million range after earning $8.3 million on Friday. Based on Saturday sales, it presently holds a lead over Housemaid, which would be the best opening ever for Angel Studios, home of Sound of Freedom. David earned an A CinemaScore.

    Another round of films opens Christmas Day, including Sony’s Anaconda reboot (no one is quite sure where it will land). On the prestige side of the aisle, Oscar hopefuls Marty Supreme, starring Timothée Chalamet, and Hugh Jackman/Kate Hudson starrer Song Sung Blue also open nationwide.

    This story was originally published Dec. 19 at 10:21 am.

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • Box Office: ‘Kokuho’ Becomes Japan’s Top-Grossing Live-Action Film Ever

    Lee Sang-il’s Kokuho — a nearly three-hour period drama about the cloistered world of traditional kabuki theater — has defied all reasonable expectations to become Japan’s top-grossing domestic live-action film of all time.

    The Sony-backed feature, produced by Aniplex in association with Myriagon Studio and distributed by Toho, has earned more than 17.37 billion yen ($111 million) since its June release in Japan, surpassing the 17.35 billion yen record held for 22 years by crime-comedy Bayside Shakedown 2 (2003).

    The film has drawn over 12 million admissions — a feat that few would have predicted for such an artistically demanding work. But the film premiered to rave reviews in the Directors’ Fortnight section of the Cannes Film Festival in May, and it has been earning effusive admirers and building momentum ever since. In April, Japan selected Kokuho as its official submission for the 2026 Oscars in the best international feature category, where it’s now considered a serious contender.

    Kokuho (which translates as “national treasure”) traces five decades in the intertwined lives of two kabuki actors: an orphaned outsider and the heir of a prestigious stage family, whose friendship curdles into obsession and rivalry. Adapting a novel by Shuichi Yoshida, Lee — best known internationally for Villain (2010) and Rage (2016) — crafts what THR’s reviewer described as a “transporting and operatic” story that “blends backstage melodrama, succession saga and making-of-an-artist dynamics” into a sweeping meditation on ambition, artistry and sacrifice.

    Kokuho

    GKIDS

    Critics have hailed the film’s visual poetry and its deep immersion in the rarefied traditions of kabuki. Sofian El Fani’s cinematography and Yohei Taneda’s lavish production design have been praised for their tactile grandeur, while stars Ryo Yoshizawa and Ryusei Yokohama have been consistently celebrated for their “exquisitely layered performances that interweave offstage characterization and onstage theatricality,” as THR’s critic put it.

    The box office triumph is particularly remarkable given the film’s long runtime (two hours and 55 minutes) and relatively esoteric subject matter — a lavish kabuki-theater epic in an era when Japan’s box office is consistently dominated by anime and franchise fare. Local analysts have enthused that Kokuho’s success proves the enduring appeal of prestige storytelling on the big screen and the power of distinctly Japanese material among domestic audiences.

    The film’s popularity has also helped drive a wave of ticket sales at real-world kabuki houses across Japan. The success of Kokuho has sparked renewed interest in the centuries-old theater form, with major venues reporting surges in attendance, younger demographics filling seats, and many first-time or lapsed patrons returning to the traditional stage performances.

    Kokuho made its North American debut at the Toronto International Film Festival in September, followed by a limited Oscar-qualifying run in the U.S. this month courtesy of Toho’s North American distribution subsidiary, GKIDS. The company is planning a wider U.S. release in early 2026.

    Patrick Brzeski

    Source link

  • China Box Office: Bi Gan’s Mesmerizing Art House Drama ‘Resurrection’ Opens to $16.5 Million

    In an exceedingly rare win for art house cinema in China, Bi Gan‘s beguiling drama Resurrection opened at the top of the country’s box office over the weekend, earning a healthy $16.5 million (116.8 million RMB). 

    The film, Gan’s third feature, was a sensation at the Cannes Film Festival in May, earning rave reviews from cinephiles and winning a “special prize” from the event’s jury, chaired by Juliette Binoche. Janus Films quickly snapped up North American rights and has set a release date for Resurrection in U.S. theaters Dec. 12.

    Resurrection won the weekend over holdover anime sensation Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle, which came in second place with $15.6 million. Lionsgate’s Now You See Me: Now You Don’t also made a respectable second-weekend showing, earning $7 million for third place. The two imports have totaled $79.3 million and $34.1 million, respectively, since their launch Nov. 14, according to data from Artisan Gateway. 

    Gan sits atop an exceedingly short list of Chinese auteurs who have managed to generate sizable box office sales with works that feel uncompromisingly noncommercial. His sophomore feature, Long Day’s Journey Into Night, starring Tang Wei, opened with a wildly impressive $37.9 million single-day total on New Year’s Day of 2019. The feat was partially pulled off via a too-successful viral marketing campaign that positioned the film as a couples-friendly date-night feature — when it was, in fact, a challenging, 138-minute art house work about memory and loss. The film received heavy backlash on social media from viewers who felt they were duped by the marketing campaign, which encouraged mass presales. 

    But Resurrection‘s robust debut proves that Gan still has plenty of young local fans — and there is still a way for artistically ambitious cinema to win in China’s increasingly commercial and nationalistic marketplace. Ticketing app Maoyan currently projects Resurrection to earn at least $30 million in its home market.

    Emerging onto the international scene with his 2015 debut Kaili Blues, Gan quickly established himself as one of contemporary cinema’s most singular stylists. Occasionally flattered by comparisons to his filmmaking hero, Andrei Tarkovsky, the 35-year-old director is celebrated for crafting films that blur the boundaries between time, memory and dream, expressed through a meditative command of image and rhythm. Long Day’s Journey Into Night pushed these preoccupations to new extremes with its celebrated final hour — a continuous, 3D long take that envelops the audience in a trance-like flow of longing and repetitive dream logic. 

    Upon its premiere at Cannes, Resurrection was hailed as Gan’s most conceptually ambitious film to date. Structured around six chapters, each dedicated to one of the senses — vision, sound, taste, smell, touch and mind — the film is at once a sensory odyssey and a meditation on cinema itself. Starring a transmogrifying Jackson Yee and a radiant Shu Qi, Resurrection tells the story of a spectral entity known as “the Phantasm,” who journeys across time through various cinematic styles, from silent film to film noir to the recent present, culminating in a sequence that could be described as something like an existential effervescence. The work is shot through with poignant visual metaphors for mortality and the transitory power of images.

    As The Hollywood Reporter‘s critic put it in Cannes in a rave: “Reflecting on the seventh art’s past, present and possible future at a moment when many believe it to be in its death throes, Bi Gan has crafted a time-tripping, genre-jumping paean to the big screen in which he revives the films he loves and then buries them a second time over — hoping, perhaps, to resurrect cinema in the process.”

    Patrick Brzeski

    Source link

  • ‘Wicked: For Good’ is even more popular than the first, soaring to a $226 million global debut

    Universal Pictures’ two-part “Wicked” gamble continues to defy gravity at the box office. Just a year after part one brought droves of audiences to movie theaters around the country, even more people bought opening weekend tickets to see the epic conclusion, “Wicked: For Good.” According to studio estimates on Sunday, “Wicked: For Good” earned $150 million from North American theaters in its first days in theaters and $226 million globally.Not only is it the biggest opening ever for a Broadway musical adaptation, unseating the record set by the first film’s $112 million launch, it’s also the second biggest debut of the year behind “A Minecraft Movie’s” $162 million.”The results are just fantastic,” said Jim Orr, who heads domestic distribution for Universal. “Some films can deliver a false positive when tickets go on sale early but these results speak for themselves.”Universal began rolling out “Wicked: For Good” in theaters earlier this week, with previews on Monday ($6.1 million from 1,050 theaters) and Wednesday ($6.5 million from 2,300 theaters). By Friday it was playing in 4,115 North American locations and had raked in $68.6 million. IMAX showings accounted for $15.5 million, or 11%, of its domestic haul — a November record for the company.IMAX CEO Rich Gelfond said in a statement that the strong market share shows, “our momentum carries into demos and genres beyond our traditional core, including families.”As with the first film, women powered opening weekend, making up around 71% of ticket buyers according to PostTrak exit polls. Critics were somewhat mixed on the final chapter, but audiences weren’t: An overwhelming 83% of audiences said it was one they would “definitely recommend” to friends. As far as foot traffic is concerned, the box office tracker EntTelligence estimates that about 2 million more people came out for “Wicked: For Good’s” first weekend than for “Wicked’s.”Jon M. Chu directed both “Wicked” films, starring Cynthia Ervio and Ariana Grande. The first film made over $758.7 million worldwide and received 10 Oscar nominations (winning two, for costume and production design ). The question is how high “Wicked: For Good” can soar. Combined, the two films cost around $300 million to produce, not including marketing and promotion costs.”The first film paved the way,” Orr said. “It’s really become a cultural event I think audiences are going to be flocking to theaters for quite some time to come.”Two other films also opened in wide release this weekend, but further down on the charts behind a buffet of holdovers. Searchlight Pictures opened its Brendan Fraser film “Rental Family” in 1,925 theaters where it earned $3.3 million. The Finnish action film “Sisu: Road to Revenge,” a Sony release, also played in 2,222 theaters. It earned an estimated $2.6 million.Second place went to “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t” with $9.1 million in its second weekend, followed by “Predator: Badlands” with $6.3 million in weekend three. “The Running Man” followed in fourth place with $5.8 million, down 65% from its debut last weekend.Although this weekend the box office was more of a winner takes all scenario, “Wicked: For Good’s” success is vitally important for the exhibition industry as a whole as it enters the final weeks of the year.”It sets up a very strong final homestretch of the year,” said Paul Dergarabedian, Comscore’s head of marketplace trends.After the slow fall season, the Thanksgiving blockbusters could not arrive soon enough. Early next week, “Zootopia 2” enters the mix and is also expected to drive big crowds to the cineplex over the holiday break.Thanksgiving is often one of the biggest moviegoing frames of the year, Dergarabedian said, and both “Wicked 2” and “Zootopia 2” will benefit. Last year “Wicked,” “Moana 2” and “Gladiator II” helped power a record five-day frame.The running domestic box office is currently hovering around $7.5 billion, according to Comscore. Before the pandemic, the annual box office would regularly hit $11 billion, but the post-pandemic goal has lessened to $9 billion. The big question now is whether titles like “Wicked: For Good,” “Zootopia 2” and “Avatar:Fire and Ash” can push the industry over that threshold.Top 10 movies by domestic box officeWith final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:1. “Wicked: For Good,” $150 million.2. “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t,” $9.1 million.3. “Predator: Badlands,” $6.3 million.4. “The Running Man,” $5.8 million.5. “Rental Family,” $3.3 million.6. “Sisu: Road to Revenge,” $2.6 million.7. “Regretting You,” $1.5 million.8. “Nuremberg,” $1.2 million.9. “Black Phone 2,” $1 million.10. “Sarah’s Oil,” $711,542.

    Universal Pictures’ two-part “Wicked” gamble continues to defy gravity at the box office. Just a year after part one brought droves of audiences to movie theaters around the country, even more people bought opening weekend tickets to see the epic conclusion, “Wicked: For Good.” According to studio estimates on Sunday, “Wicked: For Good” earned $150 million from North American theaters in its first days in theaters and $226 million globally.

    Not only is it the biggest opening ever for a Broadway musical adaptation, unseating the record set by the first film’s $112 million launch, it’s also the second biggest debut of the year behind “A Minecraft Movie’s” $162 million.

    “The results are just fantastic,” said Jim Orr, who heads domestic distribution for Universal. “Some films can deliver a false positive when tickets go on sale early but these results speak for themselves.”

    Universal began rolling out “Wicked: For Good” in theaters earlier this week, with previews on Monday ($6.1 million from 1,050 theaters) and Wednesday ($6.5 million from 2,300 theaters). By Friday it was playing in 4,115 North American locations and had raked in $68.6 million. IMAX showings accounted for $15.5 million, or 11%, of its domestic haul — a November record for the company.

    IMAX CEO Rich Gelfond said in a statement that the strong market share shows, “our momentum carries into demos and genres beyond our traditional core, including families.”

    As with the first film, women powered opening weekend, making up around 71% of ticket buyers according to PostTrak exit polls. Critics were somewhat mixed on the final chapter, but audiences weren’t: An overwhelming 83% of audiences said it was one they would “definitely recommend” to friends. As far as foot traffic is concerned, the box office tracker EntTelligence estimates that about 2 million more people came out for “Wicked: For Good’s” first weekend than for “Wicked’s.”

    Jon M. Chu directed both “Wicked” films, starring Cynthia Ervio and Ariana Grande. The first film made over $758.7 million worldwide and received 10 Oscar nominations (winning two, for costume and production design ). The question is how high “Wicked: For Good” can soar. Combined, the two films cost around $300 million to produce, not including marketing and promotion costs.

    “The first film paved the way,” Orr said. “It’s really become a cultural event I think audiences are going to be flocking to theaters for quite some time to come.”

    Two other films also opened in wide release this weekend, but further down on the charts behind a buffet of holdovers. Searchlight Pictures opened its Brendan Fraser film “Rental Family” in 1,925 theaters where it earned $3.3 million. The Finnish action film “Sisu: Road to Revenge,” a Sony release, also played in 2,222 theaters. It earned an estimated $2.6 million.

    Second place went to “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t” with $9.1 million in its second weekend, followed by “Predator: Badlands” with $6.3 million in weekend three. “The Running Man” followed in fourth place with $5.8 million, down 65% from its debut last weekend.

    Although this weekend the box office was more of a winner takes all scenario, “Wicked: For Good’s” success is vitally important for the exhibition industry as a whole as it enters the final weeks of the year.

    “It sets up a very strong final homestretch of the year,” said Paul Dergarabedian, Comscore’s head of marketplace trends.

    After the slow fall season, the Thanksgiving blockbusters could not arrive soon enough. Early next week, “Zootopia 2” enters the mix and is also expected to drive big crowds to the cineplex over the holiday break.

    Thanksgiving is often one of the biggest moviegoing frames of the year, Dergarabedian said, and both “Wicked 2” and “Zootopia 2” will benefit. Last year “Wicked,” “Moana 2” and “Gladiator II” helped power a record five-day frame.

    The running domestic box office is currently hovering around $7.5 billion, according to Comscore. Before the pandemic, the annual box office would regularly hit $11 billion, but the post-pandemic goal has lessened to $9 billion. The big question now is whether titles like “Wicked: For Good,” “Zootopia 2” and “Avatar:Fire and Ash” can push the industry over that threshold.

    Top 10 movies by domestic box office

    With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

    1. “Wicked: For Good,” $150 million.

    2. “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t,” $9.1 million.

    3. “Predator: Badlands,” $6.3 million.

    4. “The Running Man,” $5.8 million.

    5. “Rental Family,” $3.3 million.

    6. “Sisu: Road to Revenge,” $2.6 million.

    7. “Regretting You,” $1.5 million.

    8. “Nuremberg,” $1.2 million.

    9. “Black Phone 2,” $1 million.

    10. “Sarah’s Oil,” $711,542.

    Source link

  • The People Love Themselves Some ‘Now You See Me’

    The ‘Now You See Me’ franchise made its return this weekend and beat out ‘The Running Man’ for the top box office spot.

    Justin Carter

    Source link

  • Box Office Meltdown: ‘Regretting You’ Tops Worst Halloween Weekend in 31 Years With $8.1 Million

    Paramount and Constantin Films’ romance-drama Regretting You — the second Colleen Hoover book adaptation to hit the big screen after It Ends With Us — is proclaiming itself the victor of this year’s Halloween box office contest.

    According to Sunday estimates from David Ellison’s new regime, Regretting You placed No. 1 with $8.1 million from 3,245 cinemas in its sophomore outing.

    Or did it? Universal is likewise estimating a first-place finish for Blumhouse’s Black Phone 2 with $8 million from 3,425 cinemas. Most rival studios also show the horror sequel, now in its third weekend, coming in ahead of Regretting You).

    But Paramount has good reason to be bullish. Last weekend, Regretting You did switch positions with Black Phone and place No. 2 when final numbers came in, with Regretting You beating the Blumhouse pic by a safe margin. Monday will determine the correct order of the Oct. 31-Nov. 2 frame and whether Paramount was being too aggressive in the hunt for a good headline.

    Generally in such situations, a studio in Universal’s position would call the contest a tie, but in this case, no one complained, considering overall ticket sales for the weekend came in at $49.8 million — the worst showing of the year to date.

    But that’s not the most frightening fact — it was the lowest-grossing Halloween weekend in 31 years, according to Comscore. This excludes 2020, when the COVID-19 crisis forced theater closures for months.

    The last time Halloween weekend revenue came in lower was in 1993, when combined ticket sales reached $49.2 million, and that’s not adjusted for inflation, according to Comscore chief box office analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

    “While this was a truly scary weekend for the industry, a confluence of factors created an imperfect marketplace storm wherein Halloween festivities along with one of the biggest sporting events on the planet [the World Series] dominated the zeitgeist over the weekend and thus had the effect of taking the spotlight off the movie theater experience,” says Dergarabedian, adding studios and cinemas should be commended for doing what they could up the holes.

    This year’s Halloween weekend meltdown — which follows the worst October in 27 years — is due to the lack of a big commercial title on the marquee, such as 2024’s Venom: The Last Dance. This year, exhibitors had to rely on an eclectic batch of holdovers; rereleases, including Back to the Future; and the expansion of Focus Features’ awards darling and specialty offering Bugonia.

    Halloween is alway a tough holiday for Hollywood and cinema owners, especially when the actual day falls on a Friday, as it did this year. Regretting You took a major hit that day since its target audience — younger females — were otherwise occupied. On Saturday, sales spiked 200 percent.

    Domestically, Regretting You has earned $27.5 million in its first 10 days. Overseas, it earned another $8.2 million from 56 markets for a foreign tally of $23.3 million and $50.8 million globally.

    Black Phone 2, a major win for Blumhouse, sailed past the $104 million mark over the weekend after finishing Sunday with a domestic tally of $61.5 million and $43.3 million internationally, including a weekend haul of $7.3 million.

    As expected, the acclaimed Japanese manga pic Chainsaw Man – the Movie: Reze Arc fell off steeply in its second weekend of play at the domestic box office, declining 67 percent to $6 million for a 10-day domestic tally of $30.8 and a dazzling $139 million globally. Sony’s Crunchyroll division is handling Chainsaw Man in the U.S. and a number of foreign markets, excluding Japan. Its share of the total gross is $87.4 million.

    Bugonia, from Focus Features, placed No. 4 with $4.8 million as it expanded into 2,043 theaters after first launching earlier this month in select theaters. That is the widest break ever for a film directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, whose credits include Poor Things and The Favourite. Emma Stone (Poor Things) and Jesse Plemons lead the high-profile cast. Overseas, the specialty film earned $4.4 million from 47 markets for a foreign total of $5.3 million and $11.1 million globally.

    Disney provided a moment of levity when reporting grosses for the 40th anniversary rerelease of Back to the Future, saying it earned $4.7 million from 2,290 theaters in its “2,105th” week for a cume of $221.7 million (that isn’t adjusted for inflation). The classic pic placed an impressive No. 5 domestically and even beat Bruce Springsteen biographical drama and awards hopeful Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere.

    Also from Disney, Deliver Me had to settle for No. 6 after falling off a steep 57 percent to $3.8 million from 3,460 theaters for a domestic total of $16.3 million. Overseas, it took in another $4 million from 40 material markets for a foreign tally of $14.3 million and $30.6 million globally. The filmmakers and Disney are hopeful the pic will have staying power because of its subject matter, originality and solid audience scores.

    In addition to Back to the Future and perennial Halloween favorite Rocky Picture Horror Show, other rereleases included screenings of all five Twilight movies timed to the 20th anniversary of Stephenie Meyer’s seminal first novel in the romance-vampire series. Fathom and Lionsgate partnered in bringing the movie adaptation of the books back to the big screen for five days, beginning Oct. 29 and concluding Nov. 2. Roughly 1,500 theaters participated and played a different film each night. Ticket sales through Sunday are an estimated $3.5 million, including $1.5 million for the Oct. 29 showing of the first film. (Because of the way it rolled out, the rerelease did not make the weekend top 10 chart).

    Paul Thomas Anderson‘s awards frontrunner and Leonardo DiCaprio starrer One Battle After Another, however, did remain in the top 10 chart in North America in its sixth outing, earning $1.2 million from 954 runs for a domestic total of $67.8 million. And defying the naysayers, it is approaching the $200 million mark globally after finishing Sunday with a foreign share of $123 million. It is far and away the filmmaker’s top-grossing film; his previous best was 2007’s There Will Be Blood ($77.2 million), unadjusted. And 2024’s Licorice Pizza, topped at at $37 million, which was considered a success for an indie title. (Granted, One Battle sports a far bigger budget but nevertheless is hanging in there, unlike a number of awards players.)

    Elsewhere, another special event pic trying to fill the gap mentioned by Dergarabedian was Depeche Mode: M, a concert pic from Sony Music Vision and Trafalgar that grossed $1.1 million domestically and $4.7 million overseas for a total of $5.7 million from more than 2,600 cinemas across 70 countries after opening midweek (Imax screens ponied up 29 percent of all ticket sales). Conceived and directed by Mexican filmmaker Fernando Frías, the concert pic celebrates the band’s global influence while also delving into the profound connection between death, music, mortality and Mexican tradition the band captured during their 2023 Memento Mori tour

    Nov. 2, 12 p.m.: Updated with revised estimates.
    Nov.2, 4:15 p.m.: Updated with additional foreign estimates.

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • Tokyo: Yoji Yamada and Lee Sang-il Talk Japanese Cinema, Craft and Following Anime’s Global Success

    Two generational talents of Japanese cinema shared the stage to discuss each other’s work at Tokyo International Film Festival, where each has been celebrated with an award. Yōji Yamada, 91, has more than 90 directing credits to his name, while Lee Sang-il’s Kokuho is the biggest Japanese live-action box office hit in decades, having passed 16 billion yen ($105 million), and is Japan’s entry for the best international film Oscar.

    Mutual respect was more than evident, and the conversation flowed through analysis of their craft to gentle teasing, mostly from Yamada, at the standing-room only event.

    The veteran director was the first recipient of the festival’s Akira Kurosawa Award in 2004, along with Steven Spielberg. This year, it was Lee’s turn to receive it, with Yamada given the Lifetime Achievement Award the previous day.

    “They’ve introduced our films side by side, but compared with his grand epic, mine feels like quite a lightweight. I’m almost embarrassed to see them together,” said Yamada of his Tokyo Taxi, his reimagining of Christian Carion’s Driving Madeliene (2022).

    Lee, whose film Kokuho translates as national treasure, replied: “If there is such a thing as a living national treasure in filmmaking, Yamada-sensei is definitely one. I just hope to absorb even a little of his dedication.”

    Though there was a moderator on stage, Yamada effectively took his role for the opening stretch of the talk, asking questioning Lee on how he had portrayed Japan’s traditional kabuki theater, and the human drama between two of its practitioners, so vividly and convincingly onscreen.  

    Yamada began by probing into the “dramatic structure” of Kokuho, the story of two kabuki actors whose lives are bound by artistry, desire, and fate.

    “Usually, when you have two male leads, a woman is between them in some sort of triangle. But here, something entirely different lies between them: homosexuality. It’s this irrational romantic force that becomes the very theme of the story. That’s what makes this film extraordinary,” said Yamada.

    That dynamic tension had been created by Shuichi Yoshida, the author of the 2018 novel on which the film is based, noted Lee. The director previously adapted Yoshida’s Akunin (Villain) in 2010 and Ikari (Rage) in 2016, both to acclaim.

    “The tension between bloodline and sexuality creates a fascinating duality. I didn’t want jealousy or rivalry like in Amadeus. Since both men devote themselves to the same suffering, I hoped a kind of transcendent beauty would emerge by the end,” explained Lee.

    For Yamada, that avoidance of conventional melodrama was one of the keys to the film’s power.

    The two leads trained for about a year and a half in total to portray the male kabuki performers of female roles, known as onnagata, noted Lee: “They even practiced on days off during shooting. Their persistence and dedication were incredible.”

    Tanaka Min, who plays the elderly kabuki master in Kokuho, was cast in his first major film role by Yamada in The Twilight Samurai in 2002 (the film won a record 12 Japan Academy Awards and was nominated for the then best foreign language film Oscar).

    “He’s a butoh dancer [postwar avant-garde theater] not an actor, and at first he was terrible,” laughed Yamada. “Completely wooden. But his physicality and voice had such presence that it didn’t matter. Even now he hasn’t really ‘improved’, but that’s what makes him special, like a Noh actor. You don’t need him to act; his just being there is enough.”

    Pushing back against Yamada’s playful ribbing about his reputation as a demanding director, Lee said, “That presence, combined with his movement, gives him a kind of magic. I wasn’t harsh in directing him. He doesn’t change no matter what you say, so instead of forcing it, I’d suggest small adjustments in tone or gesture. His stillness speaks volumes.”

    Aside from its setting in the niche world of highbrow traditional theater, another reason Kokuho’s commercial success has been a surprise is its nearly three-hour runtime. Lee revealed that his initial cut was actually four and a half hours. “All the kabuki scenes were about twice as long; That alone was an extra half hour; we had to trim a lot.”

    Despite Yamada’s best efforts, after an offstage prompt, talk turned to Tokyo Taxi, and how he approached the remake.

    “I simply asked myself, if it were Japan, how would it go? A Japanese taxi driver and an elderly Japanese woman, their relationship would of course be different,” said Yamada.

    Scenes with the taxi driver (Takuya Kimura) at home with his family, which were not part of the original, were singled out for praise by Lee for adding domestic realism.

    “I really wanted to make that breakfast scene,” said Yamada. “The year before, he [Kimura] played a top Paris-trained chef. This time, he’s eating natto [fermented soybeans]. But he’s very earnest and sincere. Always early on set: a true professional.”

    Next it was time for Lee to tease Yamada, asking why he always stands right beside the “Because the actors need to know I’m watching,” replied Yamada. “They can feel the director’s gaze. I don’t understand how some directors give directions from a monitor, sometimes from another room.”
    camera on set.

    Smiling as he did so, Yamada steered the conversation back to Kokuho, asking Lee about the numbers of extras in the kabuki scenes (500), and how he had broken multiple cinematic conventions in creating his tour de force.

    Answering an audience question about the potential for Japanese live-action filmmaking to emulate the international success of anime, Yamada made an impassioned plea for more government backing.

    “Japanese animation is a huge global success, while our live-action films barely register. When I entered the industry 70 years ago, Japanese cinema was vibrant and internationally respected — Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, Ozu’s Tokyo Story, Mizoguchi’s Ugetsu. Now, Korea and China have surged ahead. It’s painful to watch,” Yamada said. “We need not just filmmakers’ effort but national support. The Korean government truly backs its film industry. Japan should do the same. It’s a matter of cultural policy.”

    Gavin Blair

    Source link

  • Box Office Upset: ‘Chainsaw Man’ Eyes $15M-$17M Win, Colleen Hoover Strikes Again With ‘Regretting You’

    Japanese anime feature Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc is off to an impressive start at the U.S. box office, where it topped Friday’s chart with $8.5 million from 3,003 theaters. The acclaimed manga pic — now on course to open to a better-than-expected $15 million to $17 million — boasts a 96 percent critics score and a 99 percent audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, a rarely seen combo, in addition to an A CinemaScore.

    Friday’s earnings include a stellar $3.4 million in Thursday previews.

    Since launching in cinemas last month in Japan, Chainsaw Man — The Movie has already grossed north of $64 million at the global box office. Sony and Crunchyroll are handling the movie domestically and in select overseas markets. Produced by the team at MAPPA, the R-rated pic is based on the hit manga-turned-anime TV series that is available to stream in the U.S. on Disney+, Crunchyroll and other platforms.

    Chainsaw Man follows the adventures of Denji (Kikunosuke Toya), a teenager and demon hunter who is killed by his overlords, the yakuza. But when his beloved chainsaw-powered, devil-dog Pochita (Shiori Izawa) makes a deal and sacrifices himself, Benji is reborn with the ability to transform parts of his body into chainsaws. Along with violence, the pic doubles as a teenage romance with the arrival of the mysterious Reze. However, Reze is not quite who she seems, and a series of battles ensues that could destroy Tokyo when their love story takes a twisted turn.

    Directed by Tatsuya Yoshihara, the film is based on Tatsuki Fujimoto’s original story, with a screenplay by Hiroshi Seko. “It’s safe to say that manga and anime fans won’t be disappointed, even if they’ll inevitably be nitpicking about one narrative aspect or another,” writes THR in its review.

    Heading into its U.S. opening, Chainsaw Man was expected to battle Blumhouse and Universal’s holdover hit Black Phone 2 for No. 1 with a debut in the $11 million to $12 million range. But it quickly pulled ahead of the pack thanks to males, who made up 75 percent of all ticket buyers, and younger moviegoers, with more than 50 percent of ticket buyers under the age of 25. It’s also drawing an ethnically diverse audience, including over-indexing among Asian moviegoers (17 percent), according to PostTrak.

    In second surprise twist, Regretting You — the second Colleen Hoover book adaptation to hit the big screen after 2024’s box office blockbuster It Ends With Us — pulled ahead of Black Phone 2 and Disney’s new bio-drama Deliver Me From Nowhere: Springsteen to come in second on Friday with a better-than-expected $5.2 million from 3,593 locations for an estimated opening of $13 million (rival studios aren’t sure it will actually hit that mark).

    Many expected Regretting You to be dinged by generally withering reviews, but the female-fueled pic is garnering strong exits on PosTrak and boasts an audience score of 90 percent on Rotten Tomatoes (its CinemaScore, however, was only a B). It’s also clearly benefiting from a glut of male-skewing fare that has dominated the marquee for months, and is also a testament to Hoover’s enduring popularity among younger women and teenagers. (She’s one of many who have been caught up in the ongoing legal battle between It Ends With Us director/producer Justin Baldoni and actress/producer Blake Lively). Females made up nearly 85 percent of Friday’s audience, while 73 percent of all ticket buyers were under the age of 35.

    The new film is described as a romantic drama that speaks to the aspirational theme of living life fully and with no regrets. Constantin Films produced and financed the movie, with Paramount acquiring domestic and certain overseas rights. Internationally, the film opens this week in 40 markets, including the U.K., Australia, Brazil and Mexico.

    Instead of holding Thursday previews, Paramount hosted a special Regretting You fan event at AMC Lincoln Square in New York City, which was streamed live into 500 theaters across the country. The screening of the pic was accompanied by a Q&A with director Josh Boone and cast members Allison Williams, Dave Franco and Mason Thames.

    Saturday will determine whether Regretting You can hold its lead over Blumhouse and Universal’s holdover hit Black Phone 2, which earned $3.8 million on Friday and is projecting a debut in the $12 million-plus range. The pic is holding in remarkably well for a horror title, and should continue to take advantage of being the only major studio horror film opening nationwide over the Halloween corridor this year.

    Disney’s bio-drama Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere is now expected to come in fourth with $9 million to $10 million after earning $3.5 million on Friday, including $850,000 in Thursday previews. The movie is skewing notably older, which is no surprise. More than 60 percent of ticket buyers on Friday were 45 and older, including 40 percent over the age of 55. Its Rotten Tomatoes critics score presently rests at 66 percent; the RT audience score is far stronger at 83 percent. And it earned a B+ CinemaScore.

    Springsteen, playing in a total of 3,460 cinemas, should see a boost from 250 IMAX runs and an additional 750 in other premium large-format auditoriums. The music-infused pic stars Jeremy Allen White in the titular role, and he is credited in THR‘s review for giving a “raw and internalized performance as The Boss.” Jeremy Strong, Stephen Graham and Odessa Young also star in director Scott Cooper’s examination of a brutal comedown after a blockbuster tour, which yielded the prolific musician’s most personal album.

    It remains to be seen how much of an impact the first two games of this year’s World Series — which pits the Los Angeles Dodgers against the Toronto Blue Jays — have on the weekend box office. Generally speaking, NFL games pose far more competition. At the same time, L.A. is the largest moviegoing market alongside New York City (it is also the biggest market for anime). Friday night’s opening game of the World Series, as well as Saturday’s, are both in Toronto.

    At the specialty box office, Neon is launching Shelby Oaks in 1,823 locations. Marking YouTube movie critic Chris Stuckmann‘s debut feature, the found-footage pic is eyeing an opening in the $2 million to $2.5 million range. So far, its main claim to fame is that it raised $1.4 million via a Kickstarter campaign, the highest amount ever for a horror title, per the crowd-sourcing platform. Neon later provided some additional funds.

    Focus Features’ awards contender Bugonia is also making headlines in its limited debut at the specialty box office, and is on course to post an opening per-location average of $32,765 from 17 cinemas, one of the best platform starts of the year to date (it will also be the top location average of the weekend by a long shot). Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, the acclaimed film stars Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons.

    Oct. 25, 9:30 a.m.: Updated with Friday grosses.

    This story was originally published Oct. 24 at 6:43 p.m.

    Pamela McClintock

    Source link

  • ‘Black Phone 2’ Rings Up a Box Office Win for Blumhouse

    October’s big horror movie, Black Phone 2, has opened strong for Blumhouse, and took home #1 at the box office.

    Per Deadline, the sequel to Universal’s 2022 horror hit made $42 million worldwide, with $26.5 million of it coming from North America. Both takes are slightly above the respective $23.3 million (domestic) and $35.8 million (global) of its predecessor’s start, and give Blumhouse a much-needed win after its earlier horror flicks in 2025 like M3GAN 2.0 and Wolf Man underperformed.

    Directed again by Scott Derrickson and starring much of the first film’s cast—Ethan Hawke, Mason Thames, Madeleine McGraw, and Miguel Cazarez Mora—Black Phone 2 sees Hawke’s child-abducting Grabber dead, but terrorizing the kids who defeated him via another black phone stationed at a kids camp. The first movie was based off a short story by Joe Hill, but the story for this one is wholly original, and reception to this sequel has been generally positive.

    Meanwhile, Tron: Ares fell 65% in North America, adding another $11.1 million for a new domestic total of $54.6 million. Disney’s legacy threequel didn’t fare much better internationally; it earned another $14.1 million, but did not land at all with Chinese audiences in its debut weekend. With its new $103 million global total, it’s looking likely that the series won’t have much of a future going forward. As for Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, Netflix hasn’t shared any box office numbers yet, but that tune may change as its limited (and slightly confusing) release expands to other theaters next weekend.

    Speaking of “next weekend,” we’ve got Yorgos Lanthimos’ comedy flick Bugonia, Tina Romero’s Queens of the Dead, and Chris Stuckmann’s horror debut Shelby Oaks all hitting theaters on October 24. Halloween weekend doesn’t have any genre films, but November 7 has Predator: Badlands.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Justin Carter

    Source link

  • Taylor Swift’s Mini-Movie The Life of a Showgirl Experiment Paid Off

    You think a billion dollars is cool? To offer a Taylor Swift-specific paraphrase of The Social Network, you know what’s cool? Two billion dollars.

    Hot on the heels of her latest album release, The Life of a Showgirl, already a success on the charts, Bloomberg updated their estimate of Swift’s wealth and announced that, since they added her to their running billionaire list in 2024, she’s now worth an estimated $2.1 billion—and that’s before any profits from her three-day theatrical event, The Official Release Party of a Showgirl.

    And, seeing as that release—not a movie, but a mish-mash of the music video for “The Fate of Ophelia” and behind-the-scenes footage from that, lyric videos, and straight-to-camera footage of Swift explaining her inspiration behind the songs—topped the weekend’s box office, raking in $33 million in domestic ticket sales. It came in above One Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest film starring Leonardo DiCaprio, and dwarfed fellow debut The Smashing Machine, which took the third slot with $6 million.

    So, while Swift’s acquisition of her masters, thus upping her profit on the use of her music, expands her net worth, the proceeds from having both the number one album and the number one movie (at the same time, may we add, something even Prince didn’t accomplish with his own Purple Rain one-two punch) certainly aren’t going to hurt her wallet either.

    This isn’t the first time Swift has extended the fan experience to the cinema: In 2023, Swift brought a filmed version of her stage show, perhaps you’ve heard of it, a little something called Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour, to AMC Theaters for an initial 13-week run. It went well, to say the least: The film raked in $180.7 million domestically, and $261.6 million worldwide, making it the most lucrative concert film of all time. The extremely limited release of Showgirl won’t top Eras, of course, but if there was any doubt that Swift could get butts in seats (to use the scientific term) in a variety of media, consider it thoroughly banished, opening the door for future multimedia experimentation for the artist.

    A representative for Swift did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Kase Wickman

    Source link

  • In heavyweight movie showdown, Taylor Swift’s ‘Show Girl’ smashes The Rock’s ‘Smashing Machine’ | Fortune

    It might have looked like a heavyweight matchup, but Swift’s devoted fanbase once again proved unstoppable with her film “The Official Release Party of a Show Girl,” which debuted at No. 1 with $33 million in North America, according to Sunday estimates from Comscore. The AMC Theatres release — announced only two weeks ago with minimal promotion — served as a companion piece to Swift’s 12th studio album, packaging music videos, behind-the-scenes footage and profanity-free lyric visuals into an 89-minute experience.

    The film played at all 540 AMC theaters in the U.S. for three days, ending after Sunday. AMC aired the show in Mexico, Canada and across Europe.

    “For Taylor Swift to harness the power of the movie theater to build her brand, create excitement among her fans, and create a communal experience outside of her touring, outside of her live performances, is really a stroke of genius,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. “To be able to add another $33 million to the box office bottom line is much welcomed by theater owners who were looking for content for their big screens.”

    It comes nearly two years after her “The Eras Tour” concert film opened to $96 million, with Swift extending her streak of box office dominance.

    Meanwhile, Johnson saw a more modest showing. His A24 drama “The Smashing Machine,” co-starring Emily Blunt, opened in third place with a mere $6 million, trailing Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” which earned $11.1 million and has now accumulated $107 million globally.

    Despite strong reviews and a 15-minute standing ovation at the Venice Film Festival — where Johnson drew praise for portraying MMA legend Mark Kerr — the film marked one of the lowest openings as a lead.

    “When major movie stars branch out into more indie roles, like Tom Cruise in ‘Magnolia,’ they’re trying to redefine their career,” Dergarabedian said. “They can straddle both universes, so Dwayne Johnson and all the acclaim he’s getting. That prestige factor. That’s the currency. He knows box office. He studies this and he’s a business person. But also realize that when you go outside of your comfort zone, it puts him in a certain light. … Dwayne Johnson is redefining what he can do.”

    Beyond the two marquee names, the rest of the weekend lineup offered a wide mix ranging from animated adventures to horror sequels and international releases.

    DreamWorks Animation’s family adventure “Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie” debuted in fourth place with $5.2 million, expanding the popular Netflix preschool series to the big screen. Warner Bros.’ supernatural thriller “The Conjuring: Last Rites” followed in fifth with $4 million, pulling in $458.2 million globally.

    In sixth was “Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Infinity Castle,”the latest entry in the hit Japanese anime saga, earning $3.5 million. A re-release of “Avatar: The Way of Water” made a splash in seventh with $3.1 million — a solid return for the 2022 blockbuster ahead of “Avatar: The Fire and Ash” on Dec. 19.

    Rounding out the top 10 were “The Strangers: Chapter 2” with $2.8 million, the IFC dark comedy “Good Boy” with $2.2 million, marking the company’s second-best opening weekend ever. “Kantara: A Legend – Chapter 1” with $1.7 million.

    Dergarabedian said he’s looking forward to October films such as “Tron: Ares,” “Kiss of the Spider Woman” and “Roofman,” starring Channing Tatum.

    Top 10 movies by domestic box office

    With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

    1. “The Official Release Party of a Show Girl,” $33 million

    2. “One Battle After Another,” $11.1 million.

    3. “The Smashing Machine,” $6 million.

    4. “Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie,” $5.2 million.

    5. “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” $4 million.

    6. ““Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Infinity Castle,” $3.5 million.

    7. “Avatar: The Way of Water,” $3.1 million.

    8. “The Strangers: Chapter 2,” $2.8 million.

    9. ““Good Boy,” $2.2 million.

    10. “Kantara A Legend: Chapter 1,” $1.7 million.

    Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business. Apply for an invitation.

    Jonathan Landrum Jr., The Associated Press

    Source link