Tag Archives: jumanji: welcome to the jungle

Black Panther Delivers $201.7 million over 3 days, over $235 for 4 days, over $361 million Worldwide

As shouldn’t be a surprise Black Panther dominated the box office shattering expectations for a record setting weekend. The film has earned an estimated $201.7 million for the three-day weekend (beating our conservative prediction of $175 million). That’s the fight largest three-day domestic opening in history. The film will earn around $235 million over the four-day holiday weekend.

That’s the largest February opening of all-time, the largest President’s Day weekend opening of all-time, and the second largest opening for the Marvel Cinematic Universe behind The Avengers‘ $207.4 million.

Internationally, the film earned an estimated $169 million from 48 markets for a three day debut of $361 million, the fifteenth largest global opening of all-time. It doesn’t debut in China until March 9, Japan on March 1, and Russia, Vietnam, Trinidad, Peru, and Venezuela next weekend.

The film received an “A+” CinemaScore and played to a 55% male audience and 61% over the age of 25. Expect the film to have impressive legs and dominate the next month.

In second place was Peter Rabbit which earned an estimated $17.25 million for the three-day and is estimated to earn $22+ million after four days. The domestic total is $48 million after ten days.

In third place was Fifty Shades Freed, last weekend’s winner. The film earned an estimated $16.9 million for three days and around $19 million for four. The film also added $47.7 million internationally for a worldwide total of $268.9 million.

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle added $7.9 million for the three days and an estimated $10 million for the four days. The film has earned $904 million worldwide and still has yet to open in Japan which happens on April 6.

Rounding off the top five was The 15:17 to Paris which brought in $7.7 million over the three days and an estimated $9 million for the four.

When it comes to other comic adaptations….

Thor: Ragnarok was in #29 earning an estimated $191,000 to bring its domestic total to $314.6 million worldwide.

We’ll be back in an hour for a further dive into 2017’s comic adaptation’s numbers and kick off 2018’s.

It’s 1, 2, 3 for New Films Topping the Weekend Box Office

Fifty Shades Free topped the weekend box office with an estimated $38.8 million off of a $55 million budget. The film also earned $98.1 million at the foreign box office for a total of $136.9 million worldwide. The franchise crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide with the latest film’s opening.

That’s the worst opening for the film franchise with the original opening with $85.2 million in 2015, the second with $46.6 million in 2017, and now this.

The film also earned a “B+” CinemaScore. This will be a short victory as next week brings Black Panther which will suck up the air for the entire box office. You can read our review.

Coming in second place was Peter Rabbit with an estimated $25 million. The film, which has a $50 million budget, received an “A-” CinemaScore and should do fine in the long term without much competition for kids.

In third place was The 15:17 to Paris which earned an estimated $12.6 million off of a $30 million budget. With an additional $5.3 million at the foreign box office the film earned $17.9 million worldwide and a “B-” CinemaScore.

Dropping to fourth place was Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle with an estimated $9.8 million. The film now stands at $365.7 million domestically and $881.8 million worldwide. Not bad for a $90 million film. The movie passed Spider-Man: Homecoming‘s $880.2 million which now drops to sixth for the year.

Rounding out the top five was The Greatest Showman which earned $6.4 million to bring its domestic total to $146.5 million and $314.2 million worldwide.

When it comest to comic adaptations…

Thor: Ragnarok continues to bring in the dollars earning an estimated $215,000 to bring its domestic total to $314.3 million and $853 million worldwide.

We’ll have more info on 2017’s comic film adaptations in an hour.

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle Returns to the Top of the Box Office. Passes Thor

In its seventh week, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle topped the weekend box office knocking off Maze Runner: The Death Cure which was last week’s top film. Jumanji earned an estimated $11 million to bring its domestic total to $352.6 million. Worldwide the film has earned $855.7 million. It passed Thor: Ragnarok for worldwide grosses and now is sititng in eighth. The film will likely pass Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 this week. The film still has yet to hit theaters in Japan. That doesn’t happen until April 6.

Maze Runner: The Death Cure dropped to second place with an estimated $10.2 million with a domestic total of $39.8 million and worldwide total of $182.6 million.

Winchester debuted in third place. The film earned an estimated $9.3 million. It earned a “B-” CinemaScore and had a 58% female audience with 64% overthe age of 25.

Holding steady in fourth place was The Greatest Showman which added $7.8 million to its domestic total. The film is at $137.5 million after seven weeks. The film has earned $290.5 million worldwide.

Rounding out the top five was Hostiles which dropped down from third place last week. The film earned an estimated $5.5 million to bring its domestic total to $21.2 million.

When it comes to comic film adaptations…

Thor: Ragnarok earned $249,000 domestically. The film has earned $314 million and $852.6 million worldwide.

My Friend Dahmer keeps plugging along adding an estimated $2,200 to its total. Worldwide the film has earned $1,345,104.

We’ll be back in an hour for a deeper dive and look at 2017’s comic film adaptations.

The Maze Runner Wins the Weekend Bumping Jumanji Into Second

Maze Runner: The Death Cure was the top film at the weekend box office bumping off last weekend’s champ. The film earned an estimated $23.5 million. That’s about $7 million less than the previous film and $9 million less than the first. This third film also has the largest budget of the three films, $62 million. It also earned $15 million overseas in four markets the previous week. This weekend it added almost 70 markets and brought in $62.7 million. Worldwide the film has earned $105.5 million.

The film earned a “B+” CinemaScore and was 51% female.

In second pace was Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle which added an estimated $16.4 million. It has now earned $338.1 million domestically and has passed Spider-Man: Homecoming for domestic earnings. The film also passed Wonder Woman for worldwide earnings and now stands at $822.1 million.

In third place was Hostiles which earned an estimated $10.2 million in its sixth week. The film has earned $12.1 million domestically. The film shot up from last week’s place of #23 after it expanded the number of theaters it was in.

The Greatest Showman switched spots with the Post and came in fourth. The film added an estimated $9.5 million to its domestic total which is $126.5 million. Worldwide the film has earned $259.5 million.

The Post came in fifth with $8.9 million to bring its domestic total to $58.5 million. Worldwide the film has earned $83 million.

When it comes to comic adaptations…

Thor: Ragnarok came in at #28 and earned $183,000. Its domestic total is $313.7 million and $851.9 million worldwide.

My Friend Dahmer is still bringing in the dollars after 13 weeks with $1,500. The domestic total for the film is now $1,338,071.

We’ll be back in an hour for a deeper dive into 2017’s comic adaptations on the big screen.

Jumanji Wins the Weekend Again While 12 Strong and Den of Thieves Beat Expectations

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle won the weekend again in its fifth week. That’s three weekends in a row in first place for the film. It brought in an estimated $20 million to increase its domestic gross to $317 million. The film also brought in an estimated $32.6 million at the foreign box office to bring that to a total of $450.8 million. Worldwide the film has earned $767.8 million on a $90 million budget.

In second place was a debut, 12 Strong which earned an estimated $16.5 million. The film was expected to earn $15 million. An “A” CinemaScore indicates audience reviews helped boost the film. That audience was 55% male and 79% were 25 years or older.

Dean of Thieves was not too far behind debuted with $15.3 million. That beat a lot of expectations and forecasts. The heist got a “B+” CinemaScore which was 60% male.

Dropping from second to fourth was The Post which earned an estimated $12.2 million to bring its domestic total to $45.2 million on a $50 mllion budget. The film has earned $55.1 million worldwide.

Rounding out the top five was The Greatest Showman with an estimated $11 million to raise its domestic total to $113.5 million. The film has brought it $231.5 million worldwide.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi has now earned $1.296 billion and domestically crossed $600 million. It’s now the ninth largest worldwide release of all-time.

When it comes to comic adaptations…

Thor: Ragnarok added $249,000 to its domestic total to bring that to $313.4 million. Worldwide the film has earned $851.5 million.

My Friend Dahmer continues to plug along adding $5,500 to its domestic total. The film has now earned $1,327,841.

We’ll be back in an hour for a deeper dive into 2017’s comic film releases.

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle Wins the Weekend. The Post Takes Second.

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle won the weekend winning for a second week in a row. The film earned an estimated $27 million to bring its domestic gross to $283.2 million. Worldwide the film has earned $666.2 million. The film passed Justice League for worldwide earnings over the weekend and is now #12 for the year.

In second place was The Post which saw an expanded release. The film earned $18.6 million to bring its domestic total to $23.1 million.

The Commuter debuted in third place an earned an estimated $13.5 million.

In fourth was Insidious: The Last Key which added $12.1 million to its domestic total and it up to $48.4 million over two weekends. Worldwide the film has earned $92.6 million on a $10 million budget.

Rounding out the top five was The Greatest Showman with an estimated $11.8 million. Domestically the film has earned $94.6 million and worldwide $194.7 million.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi came in sixth and is now the highest grossing film of 2017 worldwide passing Beauty and the Beast. The film so far has earned $1.265 billion.

In comic films…

Thor: Ragnarok came in #24 for the weekend earning $371,000 to bring its domestic total to $313 million. Worldwide the film has earned $850.8 million worldwide.

My Friend Dahmer continues to plug along earning $5,000 to bring its domestic total to $1,314,571.

We’ll be back in an hour for a deeper dive into 2017’s comic movie releases.

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle Takes First while Insidious: The Last Key Debuts Strong in Second

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle took first place this past weekend with an estimated $36 million. That brings the domestic total of the film up to $244.4 million and $519.4 million on a $90 million budget.

The sequel has crushed the original which earned $100.5 million domestically and $262.8 million worldwide in 1995. That number’s not adjusted for inflation.

In second place was a new debut, Insidious: The Last Key which earned an estimated $29.3 million domestically and $49.4 million worldwide. For a $10 million budget, that’s a solid debut and makes the film already profitable (most likely). That’s the second highest debut in the four movie franchise. It beat 2015’s Insidious Chapter 3 and was only behind 2013’s Insidious Chapter 2.

In third place was Star Wars: The Last Jedi which dropped from first last week. The film added an estimated $23.6 million to its domestic total bringing that to $572.5 million and $1.205 billion worldwide. The film is $58 million from knocking Beauty and the Beast out of first place as the highest grossing film of 2017.

The film is the second highest domestic gross for a Star Wars film unadjusted for inflation, sixth adjusted for inflation and second for worldwide earnings.

In fourth place was The Greatest Showman which earned an estimated $13.8 million. The film has grossed $75.9 million so far domestically and $150.4 million worldwide.

Rounding out the top five was Pitch Perfect 3 which added $10.2 million to its domestic total. The film has earned $86 million domestically and $141 million worldwide.

When it comes to comic adaptations…

Justice League was #21 for the weekend adding $550,000 to its domestic total bringing it to $227 million and stands at $652.8 million worldwide.

Thor: Ragnarok added $534,000 to its domestic total to bring that domestic total to $312.5 million and worldwide the film has earned $849.8 million.

My Friend Dahmer continues to plug along and earned $5,000 to bring its domestic total to $1.3 million.

We’ll be back in an hour with more info on 2016’s comic film adaptations.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi Repeats, Becomes the Top Domestic Film of 2017, and Crosses $1 billion

It was a repeat weekend for the top six films with Star Wars: The Last Jedi remaining in first place. The film earned an estimated $52.4 million to bring its domestic total to $517.1 million and worldwide the film has crossed the $1 billion mark with $1.040 billion.

The film has also passed Beauty and the Beast to be the top domestic grossing film of the year. Beauty was top with $504 million with Wonder Woman now in third with $412.6 million.

In a close second place was Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle which brought in $50.6 million to bring its domestic total to $169.8 million. The film has earned $322.8 million worldwide with a budget of $90 million.

In third place was Pitch Perfect 3 earning an estimated $17.8 million to bring its domestic total to $64.3 million and $92.9 million worldwide on a $45 million budget.

The Greatest Showman was in fourth place with $15.3 million to bring its total to $48.8 million domestically and $84 million worldwide on a $84 million budget.

Rounding out the top five was Ferdinand with $11.7 million for a domestic total of $53.8 million on a $111 million budget. The film has earned $125.7 million worldwide.

Repeating in sixth was Coco with $6.6 million to bring its domestic total to $178.9 million and $537.9 million worldwide.

When it comes to comic films…

Justice League slipped to #15 from #14 with an estimated $1.3 million added to its domestic total which now stands at $225.6 million. Worldwide the film has earned $652.6 million.

Thor: Ragnarok was right behind at #16 with an estimated $1 million added to its domestic total which is now $311.4 million. Worldwide the film has earned $848 million.

My Friend Dahmer is continuing to bring in the dollars with $3,500 at #36 bringing its domestic total to $1.3 million.

We’ll be back in an hour for more of a dive into 2017’s comic film adaptations.

The Last Jedi Wins the Weekend With 2, 3, 4 for New Films

As no surprise, Star Wars: The Last Jedi won the holiday weekend with an estimated $68.5 million three day weekend. With a steep 68.9% drop from the previous weekend, the film is expected to do well this Christmas Day with all the films out doing good business.

Domestically the film has earned $365.1 million with the foreign box office bringing in $380.3 million. Worldwide the film stands at $745.4 million after a week. It will likely top $1 billion before its run ends.

Domestically, the film is $175 million behind where Star Wars: The Force Awakens was at the same point in its run but it’s ahead $79 million where Rogue One: A Star Wars Story was. It opened $27.9 million behind Force Awakens and $65 million ahead Rogue One.

In second place was Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle which earned an estimated $34 million domestically off of a $90 million budget. Domestically, the film has earned $50.6 million and it has also earned $49.5 million at the foreign box office for a total of $100.1 million.

Pitch Perfect 3 took third with an estimated $20.5 million domestically off of a $45 million budget. The film has also earned $9.8 million at the foreign box office for a total of $30.3 million.

Coming in fourth place was The Greatest Showman which earned $8.6 million over the weekend to bring its week total to $13.2 million off of an $84 million budget.

Rounding out the top five for the weekend was Ferdinand which added $7.1 million to its domestic total to bring that to $26.5 million and $34.2 million worldwide. With a budget of $111 million the film isn’t doing well and may be the stake through the heart of the animated division that’ll go to Disney as part of the Disney/Fox deal.

When it comes to comic adaptations….

Justice League was #13 for the weekend adding $1.1 million to its domestic total for the weekend bringing it to $222.7 million and $646.7 million worldwide. The film will end the year most likely at #12.

Thor: Ragnarok was #18 for the weekend and added $814,000 to its domestic total to bring that to $309.1 million and $844.5 million worldwide. It’ll end the year at #7.

My Friend Dahmer added $1,100 to its domestic total to bring that to $1.3 million and came in at #29 for the weekend.

We’ll be back in an hour for a deeper dive into this year’s comic adaptations box office numbers.

Movie Review: Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle

JumanjiThe 1995 film Jumanji holds a special place in the heart of many a millennial who grew up on the Robin Williams classic. So, when a sequel/reboot was announced, expectations were rightfully quizzical.

Did we really need another Jumanji movie? Apparently yes– and the biggest surprise of all is how much fun Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle manages to be while also giving a quick, subtle nod to its roots. However, don’t be fooled into thinking this is another kid-friendly movie. It was apparently written to the level of 13 year olds, shoving in as many dick jokes as possible into a PG-13 film. Parents should likely consider the maturity of younger children before bringing the whole family– but there’s also Coco out there if you’re looking for traditional family-friendly entertainment.

A group of high school students find themselves in detention, stumble on to a video game called Jumanji and find themselves stuck inside the game unless they can manage to defeat it. It’s sort of a Breakfast Club meets Tron, with the kids stuck in an Indiana-Jones-type jungle adventure full of the most over-the-top and ridiculous action you can imagine. Apparently all the bad guys in this jungle ride a motorbike and use machine guns.

In lesser hands, this might not have worked, but somehow this cast’s audacity and charm make this a surprisingly fun movie– as long as you don’t think about it too much.

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and Kevin Hart reunite and prove themselves a sort of post-modern Bing Crosby and Bob Hope (minus the songs). Karen Gillan stretches even more here to reinforce her bonafides as a blockbuster action star with some stellar acting and even more impressive stunt work. But it’s Jack Black who steals the show, playing his role as the popular girl stereotype to its limits.

These four do incredibly well with one another. They have real chemistry, especially Hart and Johnson. The jokes are mostly hits, and there’s a lot of them. But most of them rely on the conceit that The Rock is the nerd, Hart is the jock, Gillan the awkward girl, Black the mean girl, and that does get stretched. However, I could watch Gillan awkwardly flirt with guards and then kick their asses with martial arts all day.

The camera is also an equal-opportunity objectifier in this case, as both Gillan and Johnson are subjected to multiple cheesecake shots of their chests, arms, and other sexy bits. The film also makes a point of playing up Hart and Johnson’s height difference and Black’s more rubenesque physique for laughs. It’s all done so over-the-top and knowingly, though, that it’s fairly clear this is a satire of action movie (and video game) tropes.

However, the film’s opening exposition means we spend a decent amount of time in the real world before the film gets going, and it feels like we spend both too much time with the boring versions of these characters but also not enough to truly develop them into anything more than stereotypes.

Speaking of exposition and plot devices, upon arriving in the video game, our heroes almost immediately encounter a computer NPC (non-player character) played by Rhys Darby who is there to explain the game. It’s essentially a giant exposition dump, and with almost anyone else it might wear thin, but Darby proves himself entertaining as always.

The biggest problem with this version is its slang, mentions of social media, and other things are going to horribly date the movie. Upon meeting Nick Jonas within the video game, our heroes immediately sense something is strange about him by the way he talks. I was a teenager in the 90’s. I don’t remember anyone actually talking like that. This is likely the same for our main cast. Again, they’re stereotypes played for laughs. Oscarbait this is not. But it is otherwise really funny, and the action and pacing keep things moving along.

One black hole of charisma is whenever Bobby Cannavale shows up as the video game’s villain. He’s supposed to be awful, but he’s mostly just unwatchable and every time it cuts to him threatening his minions the film grinds to a halt. This is a waste for the same guy who (rightfully) won multiple acting awards for things like The Station Agent and Will and Grace. I want that Bobby Cannavale back, and I want him in a better role than this.

But other than that, this is a fun movie if you’re looking for a little respite from the stresses of the holidays, and if you show up to the movie theater and can’t get into The Last Jedi or aren’t in the mood for a more challenging film like The Shape of Water, this is a decent consolation prize as long as you can handle all the dick jokes. Seriously, so. many. penis jokes.

Eagle-eyed-viewers can also be on the lookout for a tribute to Robin Williams, whose character Allan Partridge, was stuck in the Jumanji board game for decades. A note carved into a the place Jonas makes his home tells us “Allan Partridge Was Here.” This film can’t replace the heart the Williams brought to the original, but this was a nice nod in what is otherwise a breakneck pace that moves from action setpiece to action setpiece.

One might consider this a successful adaptation of a video game into a movie– an incredibly rare feat for Hollywood. Other would-be adapters should take note that the comedic tone and satire of video game tropes work because it doesn’t take itself too seriously. And neither should we.

3.5 out of 5