Thanksgiving typically serves up a feast of new family movies at the box office, but Disney’s animated offering “Strange World ” fizzled with audiences out of the gates.
The production, which carried a reported $180 million budget, grossed just $18.6 million in ticket sales in its first five days and $11.9 million for the weekend in North American theaters, according to studio estimates Sunday.
The top spot for the holiday stretch, which runs Wednesday through Sunday, instead went to another Disney movie, Marvel’s “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” which raked in an additional $64 million in the last five days, $45.9 million of it from the weekend. The superhero sequel has reigned over the charts for three weekends now and has grossed $675.6 million worldwide.
It was a muted weekend despite a buffet of well-reviewed options, including the Korean War aviation drama “Devotion,” the nationwide expansion of the Timothée Chalamet cannibal romance “Bones and All” and Steven Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical “The Fabelmans.”
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“Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” also opened in 600 theaters nationwide for a brief limited run. It marks the first time a Netflix film has played in the nation’s major theater chains, including AMC, Regal and Cinemark, but neither Netflix nor the exhibitors provided sales estimates for the whodunit sequel, which won’t hit the streaming service until Dec. 23. The first “Knives Out,” which was released in theaters, opened to $41.4 million for Thanksgiving weekend in 2019.
Between the “Glass Onion” mystery and the “Strange World” miss, it was a reminder that business is still far from normal for movie theaters. Animated Disney and Pixar titles account for the top six Thanksgiving openings of all time, including films such as “Frozen,” which made $93.6 million in 2013, “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” which pulled in $84.8 million in 2018, and “Moana,” which earned $82.1 million when it opened in 2016.
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“Strange World” opened in 4,714 locations on Wednesday, but it was clear from early preview showings that it was going to be slow going. On Friday, it earned only $5.2 million. “Wakanda Forever,” by contrast, made $18.2 million on Friday in 4,258 theaters and has been out for three weeks.
The animated adventure film’s debut is one of the bigger bombs in the modern history of the Disney Animation studio, similar to the $16 million 2002 Thanksgiving opening of “Treasure Planet.” “Strange World,” directed by Don Hall and Qui Nguyen, follows a family of explorers and features the voices of Jake Gyllenhaal, Dennis Quaid, Gabrielle Union and Lucy Liu. Reviews have been mostly positive, with a 73% fresh Rotten Tomatoes score.
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Third place went to “Devotion,” directed by J.D. Dillard and starring Jonathan Majors and Glen Powell, which made $9 million in its first five days and $6 million for the weekend from 3,405 locations. The war epic is based on the true story of Jesse Brown, the first Black aviator in the history of the U.S. Navy, who along with his friend Tom Hudner were pivotal in turning the tide in one of the most brutal battles of the Korean War.
“The Menu,” the satirical fine-dining thriller starring Ralph Feinnes and Anya Taylor-Joy, landed in fourth in its second weekend, with $7.4 million for the past five days and $5.2 million for the weekend. Fifth place went to Dwayne Johnson’s DC superhero film “Black Adam.”
In sixth place for the weekend was Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans,” which is based on the filmmaker’s own family and teenage years. The film expanded to 638 theaters, where it earned $3.1 million for five days and $2.2 million for the weekend.
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“Bones and All” went into 2,727 theaters, where it made an estimated $3.6 million for the five-day opening, with $2.2 million of that coming from the weekend. According to exit polls, 74% of the audience was between ages of 18 and 34. The R-rated film from Italian director Luca Guadagnino stars Chalamet and Taylor Russell as young cannibals on a road trip through the American Midwest.
In more limited releases, drama “The Inspection” expanded to 32 screens and earned $103,033 in five days. The film, which picked up several Independent Spirit Award nominations, will continue expanding in the coming weeks.
Overall ticket sales are expected to total around $125 million. That would be down about 12% from last year, which boasted releases such as “Encanto,” which opened to $40.6 million even with a spiking COVID-19 variant. For movie theater owners, it places even more pressure on “Avatar: The Way of Water” (in theaters Dec. 16) to deliver a big windfall to close out the year.
Final numbers are expected Monday.
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Story Credit: usatoday.com