Following the longest-ever gap between Bond installments during the Daniel Craig era of the franchise – the result of four release-date delays amid the pandemic – No Time to Die, the actor’s final turn as 007, debuted in theaters this weekend saddled with lofty expectations.
The studio cites “preliminary internal polling data “which indicates that 25% of moviegoers who showed up in North American theaters this weekend returned to theaters for the first time since the start of the pandemic, offering a hopeful spin on No Time to Die‘s ability to lure holdouts back to the multiplex after over a year-and-a-half. If that statistic bears out, it may also bode well for the film’s long-term box office prospects. In addition to garnering a good A- Cinemascore and a solid 88% Audience Score on Rotten Tomatoes, No Time to Die is only available to watch in theaters, giving audiences no alternative route to view the film at home. Strong word-of-mouth could help keep it afloat against forthcoming competition including next weekend’s Halloween Kills and The Last Duel and the following weekend’s highly anticipated sci-fi epic Dune.
Falling to second place in its sophomore frame is Venom: Let There Be Carnage, which dropped 64% to an estimated $32M. That’s a steeper second-weekend drop than we saw for the first Venom, which fell 56%, though that film didn’t have a behemoth like Bond follow so quickly on its heels. Nonetheless, Let There Be Carnage has $141.67M to date – less than 1% behind the first Venom at the same point in its run, though the studio is projecting that the sequel will surpass the original installment tomorrow, on Indigenous Peoples’ Day, a holiday that many Americans have off from work.
With no other family-friendly alternatives currently in wide release, The Addams Family 2 held well in its second weekend, dropping 42% to an estimated $10.02M for a total of $31.14M so far. That’s actually a better hold than the first Addams Family, which dropped 46% in its sophomore frame – though of course, that film debuted to nearly $13M more, a difference at least partially attributable to the sequel’s day-and-date availability on PVOD.
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings finished at No. 4 with an estimated $4.2M in its sixth weekend of release, bringing the Disney/Marvel title – the only film to cross the $200M mark during the pandemic – to a grand total of $212.5M so far.
After opening to a mild $4.65M last weekend, Warner Bros.’ The Many Saints of Newark fell to fifth place with an estimated $1.45M, a rather steep 69% decline. The Sopranos prequel, which debuted day-and-date on HBO Max, has $7.41M after 10 days of release.
Disney/20th Century Studios’ Free Guy finished in sixth place with an estimated $1.3M in its ninth weekend of release, bringing the total for the Ryan Reynolds action-comedy to $119.68M.
Debuting in limited release was the A24 horror film Lamb, which broke into the top 10 with $1,000,079 from 583 screens — good enough for a seventh-place finish according to estimates.
Universal’s Dear Evan Hansen finished a hair behind in eighth place with an estimated $1,000,000 in its third weekend, bringing the total for the Broadway musical adaptation to $13.7M.
Finally, Universal’s Candyman finished at No. 9 with an estimated $700k in its seventh weekend, while Disney’s Jungle Cruise rounded out the top 10 with an estimated $214k in weekend number 11. Their totals stand at $60.07M and $116.55M, respectively.
OVERSEAS
Softer-than-expected debut in North America notwithstanding, No Time to Die continued cleaning up in its second frame overseas, where it grossed a terrific $89.54M from 66 markets. The Bond installment, which was released largely by Universal internationally (with some MGM territories), has taken in north of $257.27M overseas and $313.28M worldwide. The film debuted at No. 1 in France with an estimated $10.1M, the highest debut of the pandemic in the country to date. In the U.K. and Ireland, it took in an estimated $20.5M, a slight 28% drop from its first weekend in the territory. Its total there is now $70.9M, making it the fourth highest-grossing Universal title of all time in the market. No Time to Die opens in China on Oct. 29 and in Australia on Nov. 11.
Venom: Let There Be Carnage took in an estimated $24.8M from 13 markets overseas, including a terrific $20M in Latin America. The Sony sequel’s international total is now $43.9M and its global tally is $185.6M.
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings crossed the $400M global mark this weekend after taking in another estimated $4.9M from 46 territories. The MCU installment’s international total is now $189.1M and its worldwide tally is $401.6M. Disney reports that its releases will pass the collective $2B global mark tomorrow for 2021, making it the first MPA studio to hit that number this year. A total of seven of Disney’s films have surpassed $100M worldwide so far this year: Shang-Chi, Black Widow, Free Guy, Cruella, Jungle Cruise, Raya and the Last Dragon and Soul.
Warner Bros.’ Dune grossed another $8.8M from 32 international markets this weekend, bringing its overseas total to $117.1M. It opens in North America on Oct. 22.
Sunday’s Studio Weekend Estimates: October 8-10, 2021
Title | Estimated weekend | % change | Locations | Location change | Average | Total | Weekend | Distributor |
No Time to Die | $56,007,372 | 4,407 | $12,709 | $56,007,372 | 1 | United Artists / MGM | ||
Venom: Let There be Carnage | $32,000,000 | -64% | 4,225 | n/c | $7,574 | $141,665,616 | 2 | Sony Pictures |
The Addams Family 2 | $10,019,040 | -42% | 4,207 | n/c | $2,382 | $31,140,891 | 2 | United Artists / MGM |
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings | $4,200,000 | -31% | 2,800 | -655 | $1,500 | $212,456,765 | 6 | Walt Disney |
The Many Saints of Newark | $1,450,000 | -69% | 3,181 | n/c | $456 | $7,407,052 | 2 | Warner Bros. |
Free Guy | $1,300,000 | -43% | 1,495 | -1,050 | $870 | $119,681,287 | 9 | 20th Century Studios |
Lamb | $1,000,079 | 583 | $1,715 | $1,000,079 | 1 | A24 | ||
Dear Evan Hansen | $1,000,000 | -60% | 1,927 | -1,437 | $519 | $13,706,130 | 3 | Universal |
Candyman | $700,000 | -45% | 1,153 | -592 | $607 | $60,073,075 | 7 | Universal |
Jungle Cruise | $214,000 | -70% | 445 | -930 | $481 | $116,546,419 | 11 | Walt Disney |
PAW Patrol: The Movie | $200,000 | -53% | 404 | -345 | $495 | $40,019,471 | 8 | Paramount |
The Jesus Music | $150,000 | -73% | 270 | 21 | $556 | $857,994 | 2 | Lionsgate |
After We Fell | $131,000 | 149 | $879 | $131,000 | 5 | Vertical | ||
I’m Your Man | $50,470 | 6% | 122 | 71 | $414 | $169,165 | 3 | Bleecker Street |
The Eyes of Tammy Faye | $42,000 | -83% | 125 | -860 | $336 | $2,308,421 | 4 | Searchlight Pictures |
The Night House | $21,000 | 25% | 70 | -15 | $300 | $7,107,044 | 8 | Searchlight Pictures |
The Boss Baby: Family Business | $15,000 | -30% | 328 | -16 | $46 | $57,278,895 | 15 | Universal |
Mass | $14,457 | 4 | $3,614 | $14,457 | 1 | Bleecker Street | ||
Black Widow | $12,000 | -50% | 55 | -45 | $218 | $183,647,459 | 14 | Walt Disney |
Old | $11,000 | -60% | 146 | -30 | $75 | $48,231,320 | 12 | Universal |
Ascension | $7,500 | 3 | $2,500 | $7,500 | 1 | MTV Documentary Films |
The post WEEKEND BOX OFFICE: <em>No Time to Die</em> Debuts w/ $56M Domestic, Takes in Additional $89.5M Overseas; <em>Venom: Let There Be Carnage</em> Drops 64% to $32M in Sophomore Frame appeared first on Boxoffice.
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