âCaptain Marvelâ is likely to crush âWonder Parkâ at the box office
Marvel Studiosâ hit superhero film âCaptain Marvelâ will rule the box office charts again this weekend, as Paramount Picturesâ long-in-the-works animated kidsâ film âWonder Parkâ braces for a rocky ride at theaters.
For the record:
8:00 a.m. March 14, 2019An earlier version of this article included a mention of âSonic the Hedgehogâ and described it as a Paramount Animation movie. It is a Paramount Pictures film.
âCaptain Marvel,â starring Brie Larson as Air Force pilot-turned intergalactic savior Carol Danvers, is expected to gross about $70 million in the U.S. and Canada from Friday through Sunday, following up its impressive $153-million opening. The film, which cost at least $175 million to produce, had grossed nearly $500 million worldwide as of Monday, including $325 million overseas (led by $95 million from China).
âCaptain Marvelâ is the 21st film from Walt Disney Co.âs Marvel Studios and the first movie from the unit to feature a solo female lead. The film, which delivered a much-needed boost to the North American box office, comes less than two months before the heroine appears again in the studioâs highly anticipated âAvengers: Endgame.â
Hereâs what else to watch:
Wonder, or blunder?
The big-budget, computer-animated âWonder Park,â meanwhile, will probably open with a lackluster $10 million to $14 million Friday through Sunday, according to people whoâve read pre-release audience surveys. The film, about an imaginative young girl whose dream of an elaborate amusement park springs to life, cost $100 million to make, according to industry estimates.
âWonder Parkâ first got the greenlight in 2014, when Viacom-owned Paramount was trying to fill its pipeline with more animated movies after its distribution deal with DreamWorks Animation ended.
Featuring the voices of Matthew Broderick and Jennifer Garner, the film suffered a blow when Paramount fired director Dylan Brown after complaints about âinappropriate and unwanted conduct.â Brown disputed the claims.
âWonder Parkâ will probably be the latest disappointment from Paramountâs small animation business, which previously released âSherlock Gnomesâ and âMonster Trucks.â The studio hired Mireille Soria in 2017 to overhaul the animation division.
âFive Feetâ from stardom
CBS Films and Lionsgate will target the young female demographic with âFive Feet Apart,â a tear-jerker romance about two teen cystic fibrosis patients who meet and fall in love in a hospital, though theyâre forbidden to touch. The low-budget production, starring Cole Sprouse (âRiverdaleâ) and Haley Lu Richardson (âThe Edge of Seventeenâ), is projected to open with $6 million to $9 million in domestic receipts.
The only other new wide release this weekend is Participant Mediaâs âCaptive State,â released by Focus Features. Rupert Wyatt directed the thriller about a Chicago neighborhood under occupation by an alien force, which is poised to gross less than $5 million.
Getting âGreenâ from China
Participantâs racial drama âGreen Bookâ has enjoyed a solid bump at the box office since it won the best picture Oscar last month, bringing its U.S.-Canada total to about $80 million.
Surprisingly, the film, which cost $23 million to produce, has also done strong business in China, the worldâs second-largest box office market.
The movie about a white bouncer who drives a black pianist on a concert tour through the Jim Crow South grossed $27 million in China last week, bringing its total in the country to an impressive $44.5 million, according to consulting firm Artisan Gateway. For comparison, the big-budget âHow to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden Worldâ has collected $48 million in the Middle Kingdom in the same amount of time.
âGreen Bookâsâ feel-good message probably resonated with Chinese moviegoers. But the grosses are also a sign that, although the Oscars may not have the commercial clout they once did in the U.S., they can be a boon in China.
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