Disney’s animated adventure “Raya and the Last Dragon” led the domestic box office in its third weekend, illustrating the appeal of family films as Hollywood attempts to mount a movie going revival.
“Raya and the Last Dragon” collected $5.2 million from 2,261 theatres through Sunday, representing a scant 5per cent decline.
Disney can thank the reopening of Los Angeles movie theatres for the stellar hold in ticket sales. Cinemas in the City of Angels were given permission to resume operations on March 12, but most film exhibitors weren’t able to get up and running until now.
Capacity in Los Angeles area movie theatres will be capped at 25 per cent, or 100 people per auditorium, which is double the limit in New York, where it’s restricted to 50 people.
Even with restrictions, Los Angeles accounted for nearly 9 per cent of all movie tickets sold this weekend, according to Comscore.
“This weekend showed solid results from holdovers, demonstrating the revenue generating horsepower of opening the biggest box-office market in North America,” said Paul Dergarabedian, a senior media analyst with Comscore.
“Eager movie fans in Los Angeles showed up in solid numbers to enjoy the big screen experience once again.”
AMC Theatres, the cinema chain with the biggest footprint in the country, has reopened 98 per cent of its locations, including 40 venues in California, as of March 19.
The circuit expects to reopen even more locations by March 26.
“It was exactly one year ago that we closed all AMC locations in the United States,” said Adam Aron, the CEO of AMC.
“It gives me immense joy to say that by the end of next week we expect that 99 per cent of our U.S. locations will have reopened.”
“Raya and the Last Dragon” amassed another $8 million overseas from 29 countries. The film, which is available to Disney Plus subscribers for an additional $30, has generated $71 million globally to date.
Without much in the way of competition, “Raya and the Last Dragon” was able to easily repeat No. 1 in North America.
Two new movies — “The Courier” and “City of Lies” — opened theatrically while several awards season hopefuls got a post-Oscar nomination boost.
“The Courier,” a Cold War drama led by Benedict Cumberbatch and Rachel Brosnahan, landed in third place with $2 million from 1,433 locations.
Directed by Dominic Cooke, the movie premiered at last year’s Sundance Film Festival (with the title “Ironbark”) to mostly positive reviews.
Roadside Attractions and Lionsgate, the film’s backers, reported strong turnout in Salt Lake City, Orlando and Dallas.
Meanwhile, Johnny Depp’s “City of Lies,” a crime drama about corruption in the LAPD, mostly fell flat. The poorly reviewed film cinched 11th place on box office charts, scraping together $275,049 from 501 screens.
Focus Feature’s dark comedy “Promising Young Woman,” which landed five Academy Award nominations, enjoyed a 117 per cent increase in ticket sales, with $195,000 over the three days for a total of $5.7 million.
And A24’s “Minari,” a heartwarming drama about a Korean American family that scored six Oscar nods, saw receipts climb 85 per cent.
The film earned $306,000 this weekend, bringing its tally to $1.3 million. Sony Pictures Classics’ “The Father,” the only best picture nominee to have a traditional theatrical release, made another $275,000 following nominations, lifting its total sales to $879,000.
“Raya and the Last Dragon” wasn’t the only title that witnessed a modest decline in ticket sales; none of the films in the top five dipped more than 15 per cent from the weekend prior.
Warner Bros.’ live-action-animated hybrid “Tom and Jerry” remained in second place with $3.8 million from 2,508 screens, a 7 per cent drop from last weekend.
The film, which is also playing on HBO Max for 31 days, has made $33 million at the domestic box office. Internationally, “Tom and Jerry” added another $4 million, bringing its overseas tally to $43.5 million and global haul to $77.2. million.
At No. 3, Lionsgate’s sci-fi thriller “Chaos Walking” took in $1.9 million from 2,132 theatres, marking a slight 14 per cent fall.
After three weeks of release, the Daisy Ridley and Tom Holland-led film has made $9.69 million. Universal’s “The Croods: A New Age” rounded out the top five with $620,000 from 1,411 screens. The animated family film has made $55 million since it was released last November. Globally, “The Croods” sequel has made $160 million.