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Tag: TAR

  • Cate Blanchett Explains Why She’s In The Borderlands Movie

    Cate Blanchett Explains Why She’s In The Borderlands Movie

    Image: Lionsgate / Gearbox

    It always seemed a bit weird that famed, Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett decided to be a part of the Borderlands live-action movie. Now we know the story of how this odd casting happened and it seems we can blame covid-19.

    In May 2020 it was first reported that Blanchett was in talks to star in the upcoming Borderlands movie. Directed by Eli Roth and also starring Jack Black and Kevin Hart, the live-action adaptation of Gearbox’s popular looter shooter series seemed like a strange choice for the renowned actress. What was it about the troubled development of Borderlands and Lilith—her character in the film—that attracted Blanchett? Some theorized she was looking for a big paycheck. Others suggested she was secretly a Borderlands sicko. But the actual truth is that during the pandemic lockdowns, being cooped up and not working started taking a toll on her, and she took the job.

    As explained in a new online excerpt from a feature about the Borderlands film in Empire, Blanchett says that she enjoys “crazy” roles that people wouldn’t expect her to take. However, she also suggested a bit of “covid madness” was involved as well.

    “I was spending a lot of time in the garden, using the chainsaw a little too freely. My husband said, ‘This film could save your life,’” said Blanchett.

    IGN / Lionsgate

    Funnily enough, the previously mentioned report claiming she was in talks to star in the film (which ended up being accurate) was from May 2020, just a few months into the global lockdowns happening due to the pandemic. So this all tracks. Honestly, it makes more sense now that she said yes to Borderlands because she was stuck in her house for months and was losing her mind.

    According to Empire, to get prepared for the role Blanchett got a PS5 and started playing the games. She also got “absorbed” into the Borderlands community, looking at cosplayers and super fans online. And hey, she seems to have had a good time making the film, telling Empire: “The gun-slinging stuff was so much fun.” So that’s nice. Now, I wonder if Jamie Lee Curtis—who is also in Borderlands—can similarly blame Covid-19 for taking the role.

    Borderlands hits theaters on August 9 and uh…it doesn’t look good.

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    Zack Zwiezen

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  • Video: ‘Tár’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Tár’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

    Mekado Murphy

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  • The Images of Tár: “I Felt Like I Had to Really Step Up and Deliver Here”

    The Images of Tár: “I Felt Like I Had to Really Step Up and Deliver Here”

    The availability of the Dresden Philharmonic, the group which stands in for Lydia’s fictional orchestra, was tight—so tight, in fact, that production had to begin with their scenes or they’d lose them altogether. This meant actors like Blanchett had to dive right into the conducting and musical work—and that the crew, too, had to kick things off with a bang.  

    Todd Field: We had to  marshal our energies and push them straight into this, full force. These were very, very short days because you only get an orchestra for, at most, 10 hours, and that doesn’t include their breaks and them eating. I think the first day we did something like 96 setups, and that was something that Florian and I planned for weeks and months, trying to figure out what those setups were. I don’t typically use storyboards unless that’s absolutely necessary, but in this case it was essential. 

    Florian Hoffmeister: When we started talking about the film, Todd was very adamant to emphasize that this is a working space. It’s not glorified, it’s hard work; they go in there, they rehearse all day. Authenticity was paramount. At first sight, you might think it limits the lighting, but I found it actually terribly liberating to approach the space with this theme. And Todd always said from the beginning, we should never move the camera—the golden rule. I still remember the first time that orchestra played, you just fly away. There’s this instant feeling the camera wants to move with the music.

    Field: When you look at rehearsals of orchestras, there’s some very rich footage of watching rehearsal processes. And once you go down that rabbit hole, you stay there—at least for me, watching people rehearse is infinitely more interesting than watching performance. There’s nothing fancy about the way that that is documented. It’s typically one or two cameras with a couple of boom mics and people getting what they can. Either the camera is inside the orchestra or adjacent to the orchestra. That was the approach for this. It was, by design, really banal. 

    Hoffmeister: Though if it were truthfully banal, it would be quite an appalling space. The tightrope on which you walk is how you can create an image that is arresting and inviting and allows the eye to wander, within these rules. How do you shape that? We were lucky in the sense that the German music industry is highly regulated, to the extent that the luminance on their note sheets has to have a certain brightness. So, by contract, the concert hall has to have a certain brightness so they can read their notes!

    Great Debate

    David Canfield

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  • Seeing Visions: Inside the Making of ‘Elvis,’ ‘Tár,’ and ‘Bardo’

    Seeing Visions: Inside the Making of ‘Elvis,’ ‘Tár,’ and ‘Bardo’

    Directors and cinematographers break down some of their most ambitious images.

    Yohana Desta, David Canfield

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  • Tár Sets a Trap for Proponents of Cancel Culture to Fall Right Into

    Tár Sets a Trap for Proponents of Cancel Culture to Fall Right Into

    It’s a familiar narrative in the headlines by now. “Genius” gets accused of abuse/sexual impropriety, “genius” is exiled after a snowballing of bad press and more accusers coming out of the woodwork to corroborate claims. What we haven’t seen so much documented in pop culture is when a woman is accused of such (for no biopic has yet been released of Asia Argento). That conductor/composer Lydia Tár (Cate Blanchett) happens to be a lesbian is perhaps writer-director Todd Field’s way of making a woman more “believably” predatory. Then again, look at Demi Moore as Meredith Johnson in the ahead-of-its-time movie, Disclosure. In it, Moore plays the new head of the CD-ROM division (it was 1994) at a tech company. She immediately uses her newfound power to force herself on the employee everyone thought would be promoted, Tom Sanders (Michael Douglas). Based on a book by Michael Crichton, screenwriter Paul Attanasio is sure to play up just how diabolical a woman in power can be. Feminism, after all, technically means a woman can (and should) be as ruthless as a man in her bid to climb the proverbial ladder.  

    With Tár, Field’s intent is less about that and more about the witch-hunting nature of the present era. Shit, Arthur Miller could have made a new version of The Crucible based on the #MeToo movement. What’s more, Field himself knows all about working with formerly celebrated and now “exiled” artists, having collaborated with Woody Allen after being cast in 1987’s Radio Days. And then, of course, there was the fact that Stanley Kubrick, notoriously assholish on set, mentored him as a director. So, undoubtedly, Field knows more than “a bit” about the artistic genius temperament beyond just his own (even if this is only his third feature film to be released over the course of twenty-one years, with 2001’s In the Bedroom marking his debut).

    Trying to get “inside the mind” of such a person during roughly the first twenty minutes of Tár is The New Yorker’s Adam Gopnik—this element lending an added sense of authenticity to the movie that more than occasionally makes it come across as a biopic-meets-documentary. So it is that Lydia proceeds to talk about, among other things, conducting and recording Gustav Mahler’s Fifth Symphony with the Berlin Philharmonic, this being the other city where she splits her time. Creating the perfect scenario for her to enact any “misdeeds” as her wife/concertmaster, Sharon Goodnow (Nina Hoss), and adopted daughter, Petra (Mila Bogojevic), live in Berlin full-time.

    Indeed, during her talk for The New Yorker Festival, Lydia is quick to foreshadow her own demise when she refers to what Mahler did “after the professional bottom dropped out.” But, at this moment in time, her own professional nadir feels inconceivable. Revered and sought after, her next order of business while in New York involves guest lecturing at a Juilliard class and scheduling appearances for an upcoming book release. Before she makes it to Juilliard, she indulges in receiving a little flattery from one of the many admiring female acolytes that appear to constantly surround her, this girl introducing herself as Whitney Reese (Sydney Lemmon). And as Whitney sucks her clit, so to speak, Lydia’s annoyed assistant and mentee, Francesca Lentini (Noémie Merlant), glances over in disgust. She seems rather accustomed to this sort of thing, yet can’t help but continue to be repelled by such displays of obsequiousness.

    As Whitney then compliments her on a performance she conducted at the Met for Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring, Lydia replies, “It’s the eleven pistol shots—it’s a prime number—that strike you as both victim and perpetrator.” This line, too, providing a double meaning for what is to be Lydia’s own fate. Though, of course, the majority watching it all unfold in real time will see her as a perpetrator, including those outside the narrative: the viewers of the film. To be sure, Field’s point seems to be that one’s own predictable judgment of Lydia as an abuser and predator (despite mostly vague information to support it) is a reflection of how “lynch mob”-oriented they themselves are.

    To tie into this cultural “trend” (more “way of life” at this juncture), Helena Bonham Carter gave a recent interview for The Sunday Times that addresses such disgraced famous people as Johnny Depp and J. K. Rowling being prime examples of unjustly maligned figures in the arts. More controversially still, Bonham Carter stated, when asked if the pendulum was swinging back on the #MeToo movement, “My view is that [Heard] got on that pendulum. That’s the problem with these things—that people will jump on the bandwagon because it’s the trend and to be the poster girl for it.” Ostensibly like Lydia’s accuser, Krista Taylor. Bonham Carter went on to comment about how out of hand cancel culture has gotten by adding, “Do you ban a genius for their sexual practices? There would be millions of people who if you looked closely enough at their personal life you would disqualify them. You can’t ban people. I hate cancel culture. It has become quite hysterical and there’s a kind of witch hunt and a lack of understanding.”

    These are the fundamental questions and themes being explored in Field’s two-hour-plus opus (no symphonic pun intended). Yet there are, unquestionably, many viewers who would take what is presented at face value—as “hard proof” of Lydia’s guilt. For yes, there is some obvious impropriety on her part, but we never see anything with our own eyes that fully crosses the line. Furthermore, to defend someone once they’re accused is a form of attracting one’s own career suicide. As Bonham Carter might have done by remarking of the transphobia Rowling is accused of, “It’s been taken to the extreme, the judgmentalism of people. She’s allowed her opinion, particularly if she’s suffered abuse. Everybody carries their own history of trauma and forms their opinions from that trauma and you have to respect where people come from and their pain. You don’t all have to agree on everything—that would be insane and boring. She’s not meaning it aggressively, she’s just saying something out of her own experience.”

    One that, apparently, isn’t limited to a straight white woman, as another more critically-celebrated author, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, has spoken her own views on such matters. Back in 2021, Ngozi Adichie encountered something of a similar scenario to Lydia’s in that a former student and fellow Nigerian writer, Akwaeke Emezi, sounded the alarm bell on a reason to cancel her: for transphobia. Using much the same logic as Rowling, who Ngozi Adichie specifically named with a defensive tone, she said of trans women, “My feeling is that trans women are trans women. I think if you’ve lived in the world as a man, with the privileges the world accords to men, and then change gender, it’s difficult for me to accept that then we can equate your experience with the experience of a woman who has lived from the beginning in the world as a woman, and who has not been accorded those privileges that men are.”

    The feud escalated when Ngozi Adichie then published an essay called “It Is Obscene,” detailing her past issues with both Emezi and another student (a troika permutation that mirrors what’s happening in Tár with Lydia, Francesca and Krista). Much the same way Lydia lashes out at these millennial and Gen Z fuckos, Ngozi Adichie wrote in her essay, “We have a generation of young people on social media so terrified of having the wrong opinions that they have robbed themselves of the opportunity to think and to learn and to grow. I have spoken to young people who tell me they are terrified to tweet anything, that they read and re-read their tweets because they fear they will be attacked by their own.”

    In that aforementioned scene of Lydia talking to Whitney, it is also in this instance that we get our first glimpse of what a “toucher” Lydia is, putting her hands on Whitney’s arms as she says her goodbye (at Francesca’s urging). One then gets the continued sense that she is not hemmed in by the limitations and unspoken rules of living in a cancel culture climate while teaching the class at Juilliard. Where she “dares” to get into it with a student named Max (Zethphan Smith-Gneist) about his aversion to Bach based on identity politics. Max explains his “allergy” (as Lydia calls it) as follows: “As a BIPOC pangender person, I would say Bach’s misogynistic life makes it kind of impossible for me to take his music seriously.” In disbelief, Lydia, replies, “That’s your choice. I mean, after all, ‘a soul selects her own society.’ But remember, the flipside of that closes the valves of one’s attention.” This entire exchange very much akin to the beef between Ngozi Adichie and Emezi that sparked “It Is Obscene.” But before Lydia is willing to give up entirely on this generation, she urges Max to sit with her at the piano and play some Bach.

    Alas, a mind that was born into the matrix like that simply can’t be convinced of separating the artist from the work. When he tells her that he still can’t be convinced, she pulls one of her grabbing maneuvers on him (proving, yet again, that she really is one of those “touchy-feely” people) and derides, “Don’t be so eager to be offended. The narcissism of small differences leads to the most boring conformity.”

    The entire time, Francesca has been sitting in the back of the room, and, as we later assume, filming Lydia to edit her worst soundbites in such a manner as to lead to a crescendo calling for her “cancellation” on the wave of Krista’s suicide. For, in the background of Lydia’s chaotic schedule, Krista has been sending “desperate” emails to Francesca, which she reports on to Lydia, who continues to instruct her to ignore them, insisting that “hope dies last” for people like her. Until it does die altogether, ergo suicide. But not before sending her a pointed gift in the form of Vita Sackville-West’s Challenge. One of the few, shall we say, free-spirited lesbians of the early twentieth century (with Virginia Woolf being her most famous “companion”), Sackville-West began the work with an ex-lover and fellow writer named Violet Keppel. It’s an overt dig at Lydia about how Krista feels they began a work together that she nipped in the bud before it could flourish. From Lydia’s point of view, though, it all seems to be a case of erotomania as she advises every orchestra conductor against hiring her.

    To emphasize his point about Lydia’s ignoring of cancel culture, Field even includes a voiceover of Alec “I Shot Someone” Baldwin interviewing her as an unseen person edits Lydia’s Wikipedia page. While, sure, it could be Max in a fit of rage after the Juilliard class, the more likely culprit is Krista, whose figure we then see lurking outside of Lydia’s bourgeois apartment.

    This brings us back to Francesca chatting live (as she has been since the beginning) with someone else on her phone. Sometimes, we think it’s Krista, sometimes a new cellist in the Berlin Philharmonic named Olga Metkina (Sophie Kauer). In one such moment, Francesca sends a picture of Lydia’s piano room and texts, “See what I see.” The person on the other side messages back, “Plácido Domingo’s room.” “She thinks she is being ironic.” The plot to take Lydia down, on Francesca’s part, is contingent, ultimately, on whether or not Lydia will switch out her assistant conductor, Sebastian Brix (Allan Corduner), for Francesca, who has clearly only been so willing to act as Lydia’s bitch for this very incentive.

    As for details about Krista, the most important one comes out during a lunch that Lydia has with Eliot Kaplan (Mark Strong), an amateur conductor and, more consequentially, the investment banker responsible for managing her fellowship program, Accordion. After informing him that she wants to open it up beyond being a resource for female conductors only, she explains, “It feels quaint to keep things single-gender,” adding, “And honestly, we’ve had no real trouble successfully placing any of them.” Eliot reminds, “Except one.” This being the first allusion to the unhinged Krista, this invisible antagonist in Lydia’s life throughout the film. She tells Eliot, “Oh, well. She had issues.” “So I’ve heard. The topic comes up in every Citibank meeting with her father.” Thus, we’re made aware that Krista’s sense of privilege and entitlement might have a lot to do with how she handles Lydia’s rebuffing of her as both a performer and a lover.

    As Lydia’s fall from grace becomes an avalanche overpowering any former recognition of her talent and brilliance, we’re reminded of what she said to Max earlier in the movie: “If Bach’s talent can be reduced to his gender, birth country, religion, sexuality and so on, then so can yours.” Which means that those who were eager to tar and feather her might one day receive their own unexpected comeuppance.

    Field’s decision to drop in clues that could support both perspectives on Lydia’s guilt or innocence alludes more to the former when we learn her real name is Linda Tarr. Granted, many famous people adopt a stage name, but it appears to be a way to suggest to audiences that Lydia has long been applying self-delusion daily. Perhaps not wanting to ever see or consider that her pattern of grooming younger women has been untoward. At the same time, it’s Whitney who asks for Lydia’s number, Francesca who drops none-too-subtle hints about wanting to stay over instead of meeting up with friends, Krista who becomes obsessive to the point of stalking.

    When someone with power and talent rejects a younger admirer in the same field, it can be a cause of extreme fear in the climate of now. Take, for instance, Henry Cavill setting “strict boundaries” for his friendship with Enola Holmes’ leading lady, Millie Bobby Brown (also starring alongside the previously discussed Bonham Carter). Knowing full well of what it could cost his career to be deemed in any way “inappropriate” with someone so much younger. Because no matter how beloved a star might be one day, there’s nothing to protect them from being reviled the next. And, speaking of protecting, that’s exactly what Lydia does for Petra when she returns to Berlin and approaches a school bully named Johanna (Alma Löhr). It’s here that Lydia also leans into making a threat that pertains to a she said, she said phenomenon by warning, “If you tell any grown-up what I just said, they won’t believe you, because I’m a grown-up.” Perhaps she felt the same about someone like Krista, seeing her as nothing more than a “little girl” to be toyed with for her own machinations. Maybe she does get off on her power, but that’s not really a secret characteristic of people who end up in such positions.

    The real issue people have, in the end, arrives when someone is “too good,” has “too much” success. For it’s coded in the DNA of human nature to want to knock an idol off a pedestal. Destroy, destroy, destroy. And, in the present, it’s all in service of ensuring that mediocrity continues to reign supreme over genuine talent. For the only talent that matters now is the “gift” of being able to politick “correctly.”

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Box Office: ‘Prey For The Devil’ Nabs $3 Million Friday As Oscar Contenders Struggle

    Box Office: ‘Prey For The Devil’ Nabs $3 Million Friday As Oscar Contenders Struggle

    With the big Halloween movies already in play and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever two weeks away, it is another quiet weekend for newbies at the domestic box office. The one new wide release is Lionsgate’s long-delayed Prey for the Devil. The PG-13 horror flick earned $660,000 in Thursday previews and grossed another $2.83 million Friday. That suggests an over/under $7 million opening weekend in 2,450 theaters, about in line with cautiously optimistic forecasts. Considering the relative lack of buzz, expectedly lousy reviews (17% and 3.6/10 on Rotten Tomatoes), star-free cast and harsh scary season competition, this is a moral victory even if it’s not remotely a barnburner. The film got a C+ from Cinemascore, which is almost good for a low-profile horror flick, but I would expect it will be ancient history by the time it pops up on PVOD in a few weeks.

    United Artists expanded Till into semi-wide release in its third frame. The acclaimed and Oscar-buzzy drama earned $1.03 million in 2,058 theaters. That suggests a $2.78 million (+665%) weekend for a mediocre $1,351 per-theater average and $3.607 million 17-day total. Unless it truly becomes a must-see film for Oscar watchers and related general audiences, and that could happen if Danielle Deadwyler gets a Best Actress nomination, we are looking at an under-$10 million domestic finish. With all due respect, audiences wanting a big studio flick for/from/by/about empowered Black heroes will flock to the MCU sequel opening in two weeks. To be fair, and I say this with zero judgment, we saw likewise in 2016 when Nate Parker’s much-discoursed Birth of the Nation was ignored in favor of Antoine Fuqua and Denzel Washington’s popcorn-y but righteously angry The Magnificent Seven remake.

    Likewise, rave reviews and social media discourse aside, Cate Blanchett’s TÁR isn’t exactly mainstream entertainment, and I would have said that in 1994 as well. I am old enough to remember critics and pundits decrying the lack of theatrical business for Quiz Show and Ed Wood, even if back then, at least folks were showing up for Pulp Fiction. The 2.5-hour melodrama about a world-famous and top-of-her-field conductor dealing with skeletons in her closet and/or chickens coming home to roost, expanded to 940 theaters on weekend three and earned $340,000 on Friday. That positions the Focus Features release for a $1 million weekend. That gives the Best Actress frontrunner (for now) a mere $920 per-theater average and $2.5 million 17-day total. Searchlight’s The Banshees of Inishin expanded to 59 theaters for an over/under $440,000 (+139%) weekend and $7,458 per-theater average.

    Focus Features’ Armageddon Time debuted in five theaters yesterday to indifferent results. James Grey’s mostly acclaimed 80’s set melodrama stars Anne Hathaway, Jeremy Strong and Anthony Hopkins and at least tries to be a little less nostalgic than is usual for the sub-genre. However, I imagine if any such (loosely autobiographical) coming-of-age drama is going to break out commercially, it will be Steven Spielberg’s The Fabelmans over Thanksgiving weekend. Armageddon Time earned $35,000 on Friday for an over/under $78,000 weekend and a $13,000 per-theater average. Nobody is expecting big bucks from films like Triangle of Sadness ($2.24 million in 24 days) or Decision to Leave ($794,000 after 17 days). Still, I will be curious to see which of this season’s awards contenders can at least make as much as David O. Russell’s mega-bomb Amsterdam ($15 million) or even Terrifier 2 ($7.7 million and rising).

    Scott Mendelson, Forbes Staff

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  • Weekend Box Office: ‘Ticket To Paradise’ Nabs $16 Million As Terrifier 2’ Jumps 84%

    Weekend Box Office: ‘Ticket To Paradise’ Nabs $16 Million As Terrifier 2’ Jumps 84%

    Universal’s Ticket to Paradise finally opened in North America with a refreshingly robust $16.3 million weekend. The last of Universal’s four live-action comedies this year, after Marry Me, Easter Sunday and Bros, showed that the sub-genre (even without music, action or fantasy) isn’t dead yet. Ol Parker’s $60 million rom-com, about two bitterly divorced parents (George Clooney and Julia Roberts) who team up to sabotage their daughter’s wedding, should be leggy. Oscar season expansions aside, there’s nothing for adults who don’t like superheroes or horror films until Thanksgiving weekend. It has already earned $80 million overseas, on par with The Lost City’s $85 million lifetime cume, following a month of slow international rollout. This gives the indifferently reviewed (I liked it, and your parents will too) studio programmer a $96 million global cume.

    It’s not a blockbuster, as it’s mostly winding down overseas and may end up with over/under $145 million global. But that will still be 2.45x its budget, with plenty more to come from PVOD rentals courtesy of older audiences either not caring about theaters or not wanting to pay for a babysitter. It may be a grim example of the modern theatrical business that a Julia Roberts/George Clooney romantic comedy barely scraping by is considered a sign of hope, but that’s where we are in the streaming era. Besides, if Hollywood were better at making new stars, we wouldn’t have to rely on the Tom Hanks, Tom Cruises and Julia Roberts of the world 20 years past their relative prime. That’s what Top Gun: Maverick, which finally fell out of the top ten on weekend 22, is subtextually about.

    Paramount’s
    PARA
    Smile remains the scary movie of the scary season, earning $8.35 million (-34%) while adding 142 theaters in weekend four. With $84.5 million domestic, it has passed Scream ($81 million) and will soon pass Halloween Kills ($92 million) next weekend as it races past the $100 million milestone. Heck, at the rate it’s going, it might pass Bullet Train ($103 million) *and* Jordan Peele’s Nope ($123 million) to become the biggest R-rated domestic earner of the Covid era. Oh, and it has earned $150 million worldwide, meaning it’ll soon pass Nope ($171 million) as this year’s biggest live-action Hollywood original. Hell, it may even pass $200 million worldwide before leaving theaters. Not bad for a $17 million, R-rated original initially intended for Paramount+. It will be more valuable to Paramount+ via its theatrical success.

    Universal and Blumhouse’s Halloween Ends took a massive 80% drop in weekend two, grossing just $8 million for a $54.177 million ten-day total. The poor review, divisive word-of-mouth and concurrent Peacock availability killed this one quick. Again, Peacock didn’t help, but it’s not like either Halloween Kills ($92 million from a $49 million debut) or the well-received and Peacock-free Halloween ($159 million/$77 million) were remotely leggy. I’m also old enough to remember when the biggest Halloween movies earned $47 million (Halloween in 1978), $55 million (Halloween: H20 in 1998) and $58 million (Rob Zombie’s Halloween remake in 2007) in total. Come what may, the $33 million slasher threequel has earned $82 million worldwide and should crack $110 million global before exiting theaters. The new Halloween trilogy should end with over/under $500 million worldwide on a combined $63 million budget.

    Sony’s Lyle Lyle Crocodile earned $4.2 million (-43%) in weekend three for a disappointing $28.7 million 17-day cume. Sony’s The Woman King earned $1.93 million (-48%) for a $62.9 million domestic and $83 million worldwide cume. The $50 million Viola Davis-led action drama may not be a theatrical hit. Still, it’s doing great domestically and is the sort of film Sony can justify making for theaters thanks to the first-window pay-tv deal they signed with Netflix
    NFLX
    . Warner Bros. Discovery’s Don’t Worry Darling has earned $44 million domestically and $80 million worldwide on a $35 million budget. 20th Century Studios’ all-star (and $80 million) Amsterdam has grossed just $14 million domestically and $21 million worldwide. 20th Century Studios’ $4 million, R-rated original Barbarian will cross $40 million domestic this weekend, even while Smile stole much of its buzz.

    Bloody Disgusting’s Terrifier 2 got oodles of mainstream media attention this week, as reports of audiences fainting or vomiting led to petitions to ban the film. Those petitions are no more serious than the morons advocating for a remake of Halloween Ends or the idiots who tried to raise $200 million to remake The Last Jedi. It’s nice to see that an old-school video nasty-type flick can still get the torches and pitchforks in this fragmented media culture. Art the Clown’s 138-minute epic slasher sequel earned $1.895 million (+85%) in weekend three for a $5.256 million domestic cume. Even accounting for the notion of demographically specific event movies (think RRR, Christmas with the Chosen, BTS: Permission to Dance, etc.), this is entirely unexpected. Art the Clown’s Terrifier 2 is turning into The Greatest Showman of unrated slasher epics.

    In Oscar rollout news, Martin McDonagh’s terrific The Banshees of Inisherin debuted in four theaters yesterday, earning $181,000 in its opening weekend. That will give Searchlight’s dark Brendan Gleeson/Colin Farrell/Kerry Condon/Barry Keoghan dramedy a promising $45,250 per-theater average. The film opened with $1.62 million in the United Kingdom. United Artists’ Till expanded to 104 theaters in advance of its nationwide rollout next weekend. The acclaimed true-life drama, for which Danielle Deadwyler is earning serious Oscar buzz, earned $376,000 in weekend two (+55%) for a $3,617 per-theater average and $666,500 ten-day cume. Cate Blanchett’s TÁR will also go wide next weekend. It expanded to 141 theaters and made $470,000 (+42%) for a $3,333 per-theater average and $1.175 million 17-day cume. We’ll see how many of this year’s critically acclaimed Oscar contenders can outgross Terrifier 2 ($5.3 million and rising rather than falling).

    Scott Mendelson, Forbes Staff

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