The Disney film, starring Emily Blunt and Dwayne Johnson,
debuted slightly ahead of expectations despite concerns the Delta variant would
keep family crowds at home.
For a movie that cost $200 million to produce, as
"Jungle Cruise" did, its $34 million domestic box office opening
weekend would traditionally be a major disappointment. But the pandemic has
upended the movie theater business, scrambling the rubric for success as the
industry mounts a recovery.
Today, that haul seems almost respectable, though it doesn't
mean "Jungle Cruise" will be profitable, at least not in its
theatrical iteration. A film with that price tag would traditionally have to
generate at least $500 million globally to break even.
However, Disney is hedging its bets and opening the film
simultaneously on Disney Plus, the studio's subscription streaming service,
where it will be made available to subscribers for $30. The studio deployed the
same strategy for COVID-19 era releases like "Cruella" and
"Black Widow." Disney reported on Sunday that "Jungle
Cruise" earned $30 million globally on Disney Plus Premier Access, which
is half of what "Black Widow" made in surcharge revenue.
At the international box office, "Jungle Cruise"
brought in a lackluster $27.6 million from 47 overseas territories, buoying its
worldwide box office haul to $61.8 million.
Jaume Collet-Serra directed the family friendly movie, which
is based on the Disney theme park ride and co-stars Jesse Plemons, Edgar
Ramirez, Jack Whitehall and Paul Giamatti. Set in the early 20th century around
the first world war, "Jungle Cruise" follows a morally dubious
riverboat captain (Johnson) who takes an intrepid British scientist (Blunt) and
her brother (Whitehall) on a mission to find the Tree of Life, which is believed
to possess healing powers.
Box office analysts say audiences have been more skittish
about going to the movies because of the resurgence of COVID cases across the
country. However, some experts suggest the worsening public health situation
isn't the sole reason that "Jungle Cruise" didn't dazzle in its debut
in theaters and at home. It's a genre that, outside of exceptions like
"Jurassic World" and "Jumanji" sequels, has mostly fallen
out of favor with cinemagoers. "Jungle Cruise" received mixed reviews
from critics and secured an "A-" CinemaScore.
"The primary reason for the lukewarm launch is not
COVID or the option to stream the movie; the weakness is the film itself,"
says David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm Franchise Entertainment
Research. "'Jungle Cruise' is a classic Hollywood action adventure, and
today, that genre has lost its edge."
Elsewhere on box office charts, Universal's "Old"
and A24's "The Green Knight" are locked in a close battle for second
place. It's too narrow to call, though industry insiders believe
"Old" will pull ahead once final numbers are tallied on Monday.
Directed by M. Night Shyamalan, the mind-bending thriller
about a beach that makes you old fell 60% from its initial weekend of release,
pulling in $6.76 million from 3,379 venues. "Old" debuted last
weekend to a leading $16.5 million, pushing domestic ticket sales to $30
million. Internationally, the film added $7.5 million from 44 markets, bringing
its global tally to $48 million.
The medieval fantasy adventure "The Green Knight,"
starring Dev Patel, arrived above expectations with $6.78 million from 2,790
North American theaters. From the studio behind "Zola," "Lady
Bird" and "Moonlight" and other beloved indies, "The Green
Knight" tells the story of King Arthur's headstrong nephew, who embarks on
a quest to confront the eponymous Knight -- a gigantic tree-like creature.
Also new to theaters this weekend, Focus Features'
well-reviewed drama "Stillwater," took the No. 5 spot with $5.12
million from 2,531 locations.
Directed by "Spotlight" filmmaker Tom McCarthy,
"Stillwater" stars Matt Damon as a father who travels to France to
aid his daughter who was imprisoned for allegedly murdering her girlfriend
while studying abroad. It's inspired by the story of Amanda Knox, an American
who spent four years in an Italian prison before being exonerated.
Knox has criticized the movie, claiming the filmmakers and
stars of "Stillwater" are profiting off her name and glamorizing the
struggle of her wrongful murder conviction. Knox had no involvement in the
film.
"By fictionalizing away my innocence, my total lack of
involvement, by erasing the role of the authorities in my wrongful conviction,
McCarthy reinforces an image of me as a guilty and untrustworthy person,"
Knox wrote on Twitter. "And with Matt Damon's star power, both are sure to
profit handsomely off of this fictionalization of 'the Amanda Knox saga.'"
"Stillwater" ranked below "Black Widow,"
which is currently in its fourth weekend in theaters.
The Marvel superhero adventure, headlined by Scarlett
Johansson's avenging Natasha Romanoff, brought in $6.1 million. After about one
month on the big screen, "Black Widow" has generated $166 million.
That's a decent haul for COVID times, but it's by far the worst result for recent
installments in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Johansson made headlines this week for suing Disney,
alleging the studio's decision to premiere the film on Disney Plus on the same
day as its theatrical debut was a breach of contract and cost her tens of millions.
Disney fired back, claiming Johansson benefitted from its
hybrid release on Disney Plus and saying her claim showed "callous
disregard for the horrific and prolonged global effects of the COVID-19
pandemic."
Since rival studios have similarly put movies online sooner
than usual to boost streaming service subscribers, the outcome of Johansson's
public legal dispute could mark a watershed moment for the way actors are
compensated for their work.
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