BOX OFFICE REPORT
September 24-26, 2021
(estimates from BoxOfficeMojo.com)
TOP 5
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings |
$13.2 million |
Dear Evan Hansen | $7.5 million |
Free Guy | $4.1 million |
Candyman | $2.5 million |
Cry Macho | $2.1 million |
With its only competition a poorly reviewed Broadway adaptation, Shang-Chi had no problem extending its run at the top of the box office for a fourth straight week. It's the first movie to do that since Tenet. (Pre-pandemic, you'd have to go back to Black Panther.) It's still a few bucks shy of $200 million, but it will cross that next week, where it will finally drop to second place.
Dear Evan Hansen, which got mostly negative reviews, opened in second place with a mere $7.5 million. That's even less than this year's In the Heights, which also had a Tony-winning pedigree but found no audience among the movie-going public. Still, the much-maligned high school musical had a much lower budget than Lin-Manuel Miranda's ode to the Washington Heights neighborhood.
There was little movement in spots three through five. Free Guy inched closer to passing Jungle Cruise and Candyman looks like it will finish with a very respectable $65 million. But some executives may be shedding tears over Cry Macho. Clint Eastwood's latest hasn't even crossed $10 million yet.
Outside the top 5:
- This Weekend's Indie Champ: Love Story, an Indian romantic drama. It averaged $3,236 on 300 screens. The film is an even bigger hit in its native country.
- The Eyes of Tammy Faye added more than 900 screens but still saw a drop in its box office tally. Earning only $621,000, that's about a five percent drop from its opening weekend.
- I'm Your Man, a German romance with a sci-fi twist, turned its good reviews from festivals into a solid limited release. The film averaged more than $2,000 on its 16 screens.
Next week:
October looks to be one of the busiest months of the year, with a major new release every week. First up is Venom: Let There Be Carnage, which has had seemingly dozens of release dates. The sequel to the massively successful Spider-Man-adjacent Marvel flick won't perform anywhere near as well due to the pandemic, but an opening in $35-40 million range still seems within reach. The Addams Family 2 will be lucky to get to $10 million.