Glass unbreakable, Upside and Aquaman hang on

Patrick Stewart and Louis Ashbourne Serkis star in 20th Century Fox’s The Kid Who Would Be King. It opened in fourth place at last weekend’s box office and made about $7.3 million.
Patrick Stewart and Louis Ashbourne Serkis star in 20th Century Fox’s The Kid Who Would Be King. It opened in fourth place at last weekend’s box office and made about $7.3 million.

NEW YORK -- Matthew McConaughey notched one of the worst debuts of his career, Oscar nominees saw only modest bumps and M. Night Shyamalan's Glass easily remained No. 1 on a quiet weekend in movie theaters.

In fact, none of the top three films shifted at all.

The weekend's two new wide releases -- McConaughey's tropic noir Serenity and the updated King Arthur tale The Kid Who Would Be King -- both flopped with moviegoers who instead continued to flock to Glass and Kevin Hart's The Upside.

Shyamalan's sequel to Unbreakable and Split sold $19 million in tickets according to estimates Sunday, a decent 53 percent drop from its opening weekend. In 10 days of release, Shyamalan's self-financed thriller has made $73.6 million domestically and $162.7 million globally.

The Upside, starring Hart and Bryan Cranston, also stayed lodged in second place with $12.2 million in its third weekend.

And a trident-wielding Jason Momoa defended his territory, with Aquaman again landing in third place with about $7.4 million in domestic ticket sales. Overseas, the film made around $7.8 million, bringing its global tally to $1.09 billion, according to Warner Bros. The movie has been in theaters for six weeks.

The weekend's biggest budget new entry, The Kid Who Would Be King, opened poorly with $7.3 million against a $59 million budget. The 20th Century Fox release, produced by Working Title, was written and directed by Attack the Block filmmaker Joe Cornish. In his modern-day London version of the legend, a working-class boy pulls Excalibur from a stone.

Although The Kid Who Would Be King drew good reviews (86 percent fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) and was largely pleasing to audiences (who gave it a B-plus CinemaScore), Cornish's film came in on the low side of already undersized expectations.

Smaller still was Serenity, from the recently launched distributor Aviron Pictures. Though boasting a respected writer-director (Steven Knight, the creator of Peaky Blinders and maker of 2013's Locke) and a starry cast including Anne Hathaway and Jason Clarke, Serenity made only a minor disturbance at the box office with $4.8 million in ticket sales.

The film, about a fishing boat captain on a mysterious island, was lambasted by critics (21 percent fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) and audiences agreed, giving it a D-plus CinemaScore. The film, made for about $25 million, is among McConaughey's weakest performing wide-release debuts, behind only 2017's Gold and 1996's Larger Than Life. For Hathaway, it's a new low.

Several Oscar contenders added theaters over the weekend to capitalize on Jan. 22's nominations. Peter Farrelly's Green Book, nominated for five awards including best picture, received the biggest bump, taking in $5.4 million in its widest release yet (2,430 theaters in its 11th week of release), along with $5.7 million overseas.

Green Book was the only Oscar film to crack the top 10. Bohemian Rhapsody, which has already surpassed $600 million internationally, added another $8.7 million overseas. It also took in $2.5 million domestically.

On Jan. 23, an expose published by The Atlantic detailed numerous accusations of sexual assault involving minors against Bryan Singer, the director of the Freddie Mercury bio-pic. Singer, who was fired from the production during shooting, has denied the claims.

The Favourite, which tied Roma with a co-leading 10 Oscar nominations, added 517 theaters to gross $2.6 million in 1,540 locations. The critical Dick Cheney bio-pic Vice also expanded, drawing $1.8 million from 1,557 theaters.

Once Upon a Deadpool, the PG-13 version of Deadpool 2, was the No. 1 film in China where it opened with $21.4 million.

The weekend was quiet even by the low standards of January. Tickets sales were down 30 percent from the same weekend last year, according to Comscore. After a 2018 of record box office, the slow start to 2019 is putting Hollywood in a hole. Overall ticket sales are down 12.7 percent from the same point last year.

MovieStyle on 02/01/2019

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