'Bohemian Rhapsody' Is the Box Office Champion With $51 Million Opening (Image credit: 20th Century Fox) ...

(Image credit: 20th Century Fox)
Foxâs awards contender âBohemian Rhapsodyâ is gonna have itself a real good time at the box office, earning a better-than-expected $51.1 million opening from 4,000 screens this weekend. Itâs the second biggest opening for a music biopic behind only the $60 million start of 2015âs âStraight Outta Compton.â
With a $52 million budget and an awards campaign waiting in the wings for lead star Rami Malek, this biopic about the legendary band Queen won over rock fans with Malekâs performance as Freddy Mercury and its exciting concert sequences, earning an A on CinemaScore. This success is despite more tepid reviews from critics who were left cold by the filmâs script and gave the film mixed reviews with a 60 percent Rotten Tomatoes score.
The best thing for Fox is that now that strong word-of-mouth has been earned, âBohemian Rhapsodyâ has the chance to leg out all the way through November. The biggest releases for the rest of the month are family films like âFantastic Beastsâ and âThe Grinch,â meaning that âBohemianâ will stand in many movie theaters as the most prominent offering for adult audiences for much of this month. Itâs a much needed boost to Foxâs box office fortunes in its final year prior to merging with Disney, as the studioâs 2018 domestic grosses havenât hit $1 billion yet with 35 percent of the yearâs grosses coming from âDeadpool 2.â
Speaking of Disney, that studio just got served its worst domestic opening in two years with âNutcracker and the Four Realms,â which opened to just $20 million domestic from 3,766 screens and $58.5 million worldwide against a $130 million budget. Itâs the weakest start for Disney outside of its DisneyNature documentaries since the $18 million start for âThe BFG.â The film earned a B+ on CinemaScore and a weak 35 percent RT score.
2018 has largely been a year of feast or famine for Disney, scoring astronomical hits with some big disappointments in between. In between the runaway success of âBlack Pantherâ and âAvengers: Infinity War,â the studio released the $103 million âA Wrinkle In Time,â which only made $132 million worldwide.
Then, after âAvengers,â âSolo: A Star Wars Storyâ shocked number crunchers by making a âStar Warsâ-worst $392.8 million worldwide, only for âIncredibles 2â to allow Disney to rebound weeks later with $1.23 billion grossed. Disney will look to rebound yet again with âRalph Breaks the Internetâ this Thanksgiving, with projections expecting a $65 million opening.
In third is Paramountâs âNobodyâs Fool,â which is one of the worst openings in director Tyler Perryâs career with an estimated $13.7 million from 2,468 screens. The R-Rated comedy scored just 24 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, but was characteristically strong with Perryâs fans as it earned an A- on CinemaScore. With a $19 million budget, the film should stay out of the red.
Completing the top five are Warner Bros.â âA Star Is Bornâ and Universalâs âHalloween,â each grossing $11 million this weekend. âA Star Is Bornâ now has a $165 million domestic total, while âHalloweenâ is now the second-best Blumhouse release of all-time with $150 million. âGet Outâ holds the studio record with $176 million.
More to comeâ¦
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