‘Red One’ tops North America box office but could end up in the red

    • (From left) Dwayne Johnson, Lucy Liu and Chris Evans attend the premiere of Amazon and MGM Studios' "Red One" at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Centre in New York City, New York, Nov 11, 2024.
    • (From left) Dwayne Johnson, Lucy Liu and Chris Evans attend the premiere of Amazon and MGM Studios' "Red One" at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Centre in New York City, New York, Nov 11, 2024. PHOTO: AFP
    Published Mon, Nov 18, 2024 · 06:49 AM

    AMAZON and MGM’s new winter holiday film Red One opened solidly atop the North American box office this weekend with estimated ticket sales of US$34.1 million, but with a budget estimated at US$250 million analysts say it faces a tricky path to profitability.

    “This is a soft opening for a movie that was designed from the beginning to launch a new Christmas action comedy series,” said analyst David A. Gross of Franchise Entertainment Research.

    He said the film was a crowd-pleaser but that its US$250 million budget - including a reported US$50 million cost overrun -- meant its opening was “not a disaster but ... not enough” to ensure profitability.

    The Christmas comedy has Dwayne (“the Rock”) Johnson, as head of North Pole security, enlisting the help of a hacker (Chris Evans) to track down a kidnapped Santa Claus (played by the not-exactly-jolly JK Simmons) on Christmas Eve.

    Red One unseated Sony’s horror movie Venom: the Last Dance, which slipped to second, taking in an estimated US$7.4 million in its fourth weekend out.

    Venom, starring Tom Hardy, has now earned US$127.6 million domestically and US$308 million internationally.

    In third place was Lionsgate’s comedy-drama The Best Christmas Pageant Ever, at US$5.4 million. Pete Holmes stars in the tale of a notoriously rowdy bunch of siblings who end up giving a surprising performance in a small town’s Christmas show.

    A24’s horror movie Heretic, which has famous charmer Hugh Grant turning decidedly fiendish, dropped one spot from last weekend to fourth, with ticket sales of US$5.2 million.

    Slipping to fifth but still raking in US$4.3 million in its eighth weekend out was Universal’s family-friendly animation The Wild Robot.

    Rounding out the top 10 were:

    Smile 2 (US$3 million)

    Conclave (US$2.9 million)

    Hello, Love Again (US$2.4 million)

    A Real Pain (US$2.3 million)

    Anora (US$1.8 million). AFP

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