Midway tops Doctor Sleep in sluggish weekend

Ed Skrein and Luke Kleintank star in The World War II action remake Midway. It unexpectedly came in first at last weekend’s box office and made about $17.5 million.
Ed Skrein and Luke Kleintank star in The World War II action remake Midway. It unexpectedly came in first at last weekend’s box office and made about $17.5 million.

LOS ANGELES -- Despite a fresh injection of four big movies into the marketplace including a Stephen King adaptation, a World War II epic, a glossy, holiday-theme romantic comedy and a family comedy, audiences largely stayed away from theaters last weekend and the North American box office is hurting.

Down nearly 27% from last year, the sluggish weekend allowed for a few big surprises, however. The biggest surprise was the fact that the Roland Emmerich remake of Midway, which slightly overperformed, snagged the first-place spot over Warner Bros.' Doctor Sleep, a film that came in well under expectations and has left many in the business scratching their heads as to why.

Lionsgate on Sunday estimated that Midway earned $17.5 million from 3,242 screens. The studio acquired the film about the Battle of Midway that features a large ensemble cast including Nick Jonas and Patrick Wilson.

"As expected, everyone is ecstatic," said David Spitz, Lionsgate's president of domestic distribution.

Midway cost $100 million to make. The film chronicles the pivotal naval battle between the U.S. and Japan that took place six months after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941.

Reviews didn't seem to play into account with the box office at all last weekend. Critics were not kind to Midway (it's currently at 40% on Rotten Tomatoes), but audiences, who were largely male (60 and older (87% were over 25) had given the film an A CinemaScore.

And although $17.5 million is not a massive number on its own, it was a significant upset since going into the weekend experts thought the No. 1 spot would easily go to Warner Bros.' Doctor Sleep, the high-profile Stephen King adaptation starring Ewan McGregor. But audiences slept on the well-reviewed (73% on Rotten Tomatoes) sequel to King's The Shining and it grossed only $14.1 million from over 3,800 locations.

The film picks up the story of the horror classic that was directed by Stanley Kubrick and starred Jack Nicholson. McGregor plays the grown-up Danny, the son of Nicholson's character. He told the Hollywood Reporter that the star's 40-year-old performance shaped his work. "I'm playing his son, and I wanted to feel like really his son," McGregor said.

The film from director Mike Flanagan even used the classic imagery of Kubrick's 1980 film version of The Shining, which factored heavily into the marketing.

Budgeted at $50 million, Doctor Sleep was expected to open to over $25 million. The studio was disappointed with the result. But it's at least partially attributable to the general malaise at the box office last weekend.

"There's no way to sugarcoat this, this was a pretty awful weekend for the overall marketplace," said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for the box office tracker Comscore.

In a more minor surprise, Paramount Pictures' John Cena-led Playing With Fire, a family comedy about firefighters, opened in third place with $12.8 million over Universal Pictures' Wham!-inspired romantic comedy Last Christmas. Starring Emilia Clarke and Henry Golding, Last Christmas took fourth place with $11.6 million. But Universal is optimistic about its prospects, considering the thematic nature of the film and the holiday weekends to come.

"We have a fantastic storyteller in Paul Feig and a ridiculously charming cast," said Universal's distribution head Jim Orr.

Once again, the bright spots at the box office are in the awards-friendly limited releases. Amazon opened Shia LaBeouf's autobiographical film Honey Boy in four locations, where it earned a strong $288,824. And Lauren Greenfield's Imelda Marcos documentary The Kingmaker opened in two locations to $23,600. Parasite, which earned $2.6 million from 603 locations, and Jojo Rabbit, which added $3.9 million from 802 locations, also continue to perform well as the films expand a little bit each week.

But it's still one of the worst early November weekends in years and Dergarabedian noted that the smaller films are not going to move the needle on the overall box office for the year, which remains down 5.5%.

"It's definitely a little bit of a challenged box office," Orr said.

Although The Walt Disney Co.'s Frozen 2 is on the horizon to help pick things up, Dergarabedian said that at this point, 2019 might not best the record 2018 box office year.

"I think it'd be really tough at this point [to surpass 2018]. But it's not a Chicken Little situation," Dergarabedian said. "When we compare to any other year it's a solid year."

Still, he added, for November, "this [was] a very slow weekend."

MovieStyle on 11/15/2019

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