Horror Pic ‘The Invitation’ Leads Worst Weekend At This Summer’s Box Office, All Pics Grossing $54M – Sunday Update

SUNDAY AM WRITETHRU: After Saturday update The bowels of the summer box office have been reached, with Sony’s new C CinemaScore horror movie The Invitation leading with $7M at 3,114 theaters. Like the late Andy Rooney, I get a lot of mail from sources. But in this instance, it’s about why it’s important to be gentle when covering the box office: We’re still in the pandemic, we’re not back yet, it’s not good for our business to be nasty, blah blah blah.

However, simply putting random movies in theaters without any great P&A spend doesn’t do the box office, or exhibitors, any favors. This weekend will rank as the lowest-grossing weekend to date of summer, with an estimated $53.7M for all titles (some think it’s as low as $51M). If it makes anyone feel better, it’s not the worst weekend of the year. That belongs to Jan. 28-30, when all titles made $34.9M, per Box Office Mojo.

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On some level, I get it: It’s late August. A majority of kids are back in school (Comscore says 32% K-12 were out Friday, with 38% colleges on break), and Sony traditionally has had a horror film during this latter part of the summer. Don’t Breathe was a wonderful hit for them back in late August 2016, opening to $26.4M and ending its run at $89.2M.

. - Credit: Disney
. - Credit: Disney

Disney

But let’s be honest, the more you spend, the more you gross. True, the diagnostics here on this period vampire thriller at a 29% critical rating on Rotten Tomatoes and 53% audience score doesn’t warrant a studio to spend wads of cash to open it. But we’ve seen Sony do better with less: Their August 2018 movie Slender Man, which had a D-, 8% critic score, and 17% audience on RT, opened to $11.3M and had a 2.7 multiple for a $30.6M domestic end game. Also, Sony, we’re being hard here because we know how serious you are about the theatrical window, and, yes, we know, you’ve had the biggest blockbuster of the pandemic in Spider-Man: No Way Home ($804.7M) which had a generous four-month exclusive theatrical window.

However, if studios are going to keep “experimenting” (forget about day-and-date) by underspending on P&A and releasing “small” movies in favor of bigger, it’s not going to do any favors to theatrical or exhibition. We’re already hearing that 20th Century Studios’ post Labor Day horror title Barbarian (which replaced New Line’s Salem’s Lot after it moved to 2023) is already set to crash and burn with a single digit opening. Why didn’t the Predator title Prey go in the post-Labor Day slot? It doesn’t matter that Prey was the No. 1 Hulu movie premiere to date over the Aug. 5-7 weekend. How many subscribers did you have Hulu two weeks before Prey and how many did you have two weeks following? Was that worth blowing $65M on Prey for? I’m curious how much higher Hulu subs are north of 46.2M next quarter…Warner Bros. CEO David Zaslav would defend such staight-to-streaming movies don’t have any kind of subscriber stickiness like series do and are a complete waste of money.

Social media chatter on The Invitation wasn’t horrible at mixed-leaning positive, according to RelishMix, with “fans comping and calling-out Vanilla Sky, Ready or Not, Twilight, Meghan Markle and Jordan Peele films, too. Chatter wonders how these ingredients look right for a wild date-night vampire outing.”

Let’s get away from the pandemic excuse that people don’t want to go back; it’s simply about product. Disney proved that last year by opening a Marvel movie over Labor Day weekend with Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings to holiday record results of $94.6M. Great movies will get people out at any time of year.

“Halloween Ends” - Credit: Blumhouse/Universal
“Halloween Ends” - Credit: Blumhouse/Universal

Blumhouse/Universal

If you’re going to push out a theatrical release, let’s put some oomph behind it if we’re serious about the window and the longevity of this part of the business. What’s sad as exhibitors’ Covid bailout money runs out is that they’re desperate for anything, and are powerless when it comes to a major studio dictating that the first big franchise title outside the summer, Halloween Ends, goes theatrical day-and-date. Let’s not be morons, that maneuver will siphon grosses. Enough of this widest audience crap between streaming and theatrical. Peacock is starving for paid subs.

It’s not like the PG-13 rated The Invitation is some older-skewing movie: It’s aimed right at the 18-34 crowd who’s attending movies right now, that demo repping 57% of the pic’s ticket buyers to date. Like the run-of-the-mill PG-13 horror title, The Invitation skewed more female at 57%. Those under 35 repped 70% of the crowd with diversity demos showing 44% Caucasian, 23% Latino and Hispanic, 18% Black, and 15% Asian/other. The Jessica M. Thompson-directed movie was accepted the most on the coasts and in the South. Seven of the top ten runs were in LA, which leaned toward Latino and Hispanic moviegoers.

And not to pick on Sony, but of late, yes, you, Lionsgate, are guilty of shortchanging P&A on YA film Fall, which opened to $2.5M, and stands at a running total of $5.9M. The diagnostics on that movie wasn’t horrible with 74% critic reviews on RT and 78% audience score, and a B CinemaScore. Why not stretch it to a wider audience? With results like that, there seems to be money left on the table. That pic could have potentially grossed more. In sum, let’s stop with the cutesy economic slide rule B.S. games at the box office, and how we’re profiting-off-less, and really commit to theatrical. Can we do that, studios? Obviously, if it’s a bad movie, send it to to the home market, just like they used to do with movies like The Last Seduction II. Sending terrible movies to the home market isn’t some brand new business model.

. - Credit: Everett
. - Credit: Everett

Everett

Given the lack of product this weekend, MGM/UAR went significantly wider than anticipated on George Miller’s Cannes Film Festival premiere Three Thousand Years of Longing, which, off of a 67% Rotten Tomatoes and B CinemaScore, is opening to $2.876M at 2,436 theaters. Guys actually showed up for this Idris Elba-Tilda Swinton genie romance, with 51% between 17-34, and 48% over 35. Diversity demos were 55% Caucasian, 16% Latino and Hispanic, 13% Black and 16% Asian/other. Pic’s ticket sales are from the big coastal cities, with AMC and Alamo owning the top ten runs.

. - Credit: MGM
. - Credit: MGM

MGM

But, hey, Amazon, why aren’t you going wide on a Sylvester Stallone movie? When are you guys going to grow up, realize you bought MGM and start releasing wide theatrical titles and reporting box office? I mean, like the tentpole kind of ones!? Cherish and behold the theatrical studio you bought, don’t squander it!

Why in God’s name is the movie direct to service? The last Stallone movie Rambo: Last Blood opened to $18.8M. That’s a diamond mine by pandemic box office standards. I agree with Zaslav on this one: Why are you shedding the patina (and future ancillaries) of a theatrical movie by sending it straight to homes? Did it occur to you that perhaps more toilet paper could be sold off a title with a theatrical window than merely dropping it on the service? I mean, you have the billion-dollar cost of Lord of the Rings: The Power of the Rings series next weekend (the rights alone were scooped up by the streamer for $250M). That alone should trigger an early Christmas season for the marketplace site. On Rotten Tomatoes, audiences love Samaritan at 82%.

RelishMix noticed the online convo for the film, and believes Samaritan coulda been a contender at the box office, with fans expressing “absolute adoration for Stallone, everything that he represents in the film industry, and the heroic characters that he’s played,” to those who “are also intrigued that this aging superhero project is not a Marvel or DC production and that in of itself has fans interested in a unique way.”

The objective is to get people to leave their homes, not stay at home.

Top ten films for the weekend:

1.) The Invitation (Sony) 3,114 locations, Fri $2.6M (includes $775K previews), $2.55M, Sun $1.8M, 3-day $7M/Wk 1

2.) Bullet Train (Sony) 3,513 (-268) theaters, Fri $1.54M (-31%), Sat $2.39M, Sun $1.66M, 3-day $5.6M (-30%)/Total $78.2M/Wk 4

3.) Beast (Uni) 3,754 (+11) theaters, Fri $1.3M (-70%), Sat $2.1M, Sun $1.45M,  3-day $4.9M (-58%)/Total: $20.09M/Wk 2

4.) Top Gun: Maverick (Par) 2,962  (-7) theaters, Fri $1.35M (-13%), Sat $2.06M, Sun $1.34M 3-day $4.75M (-20%), Total $691.2M/Wk 14
They have to get this to $700M. C’mon!

5.) Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero (Cru) 2,941 theaters (-77), Fri $1.3M (-88%), Sat $1.894M, Sun $1.35M, 3-day $4.544M (-78%)/Total $30.76M/ Wk 2

6.) DC League of Super-Pets (WB) 3,284 (-253) theaters, Fri $1.065M (-25%), Sat $1.85M, Sun $1.3M 3-day $4.225M (-26%)/Total $74.1M Wk 5

7. ) Three Thousand Years of Longing (UAR) 2,436 theaters, Fri $1.16M, Sat $1M, Sun $706K, 3-day $2.876M/Wk 1

8.) Minions: Rise of Gru (Uni) 2,494 theaters (-160), Fri $700K (-26%), Sat $1.2M Sun $840K 3-day $2.74M (-26%), Total: $354.78M/Wk 9

9.) Thor: Love and Thunder (Disney) 2,450 (-305) theaters, Fri. $694K (-35%), Sat $1.16M, Sun $838K, 3-day $2.7M (-33%)/Total $336.5M/Wk 8

10.) Where the Crawdads Sings (Sony) 2,216 theaters (-392), Fri $650K (-28%), Sat $957K, Sun $700K 3-day $2.32M (-28%)/Total $81.8M/Wk 7

11.) Nope (Uni) 1,909 (-472) theaters, Fri $640K (-39%), Sat $920K, Sun $650K 3-day $2.210M (-38%), Total $117.6M/Wk 6

Notables:

“Andor” - Credit: Lucasfilm
“Andor” - Credit: Lucasfilm

Lucasfilm

Star Wars: Rogue One (re) (Dis) 255 theaters Fri $500K, Sat $326K, Sun $274K, 3-day $1.1M, Total $533.2M/Wk 1 (re)
The Imax reissue included an exclusive look at the upcoming Disney+ series, Andor (I wonder what would happen if Disney just made some extra bucks and showed the first two episodes in Imax? How about we experiment with that? Why do I want to go to the theater for an advertisement??). Rogue One is now in the Imax all-time top ten with a running total of $105M.

John Boyega in “892” - Credit: Sundance Film Festival
John Boyega in “892” - Credit: Sundance Film Festival

Sundance Film Festival

Breaking (BST) 902 theaters, Fri $364K, Sat $372K, Sun $286K, 3-day $1.022M/Wk 1
Originally titled 892, Bleecker picked up this Sundance world premiere which stars John Boyega as Marine veteran Brian Brown-Easley. When he’s denied support from Veterans Affairs, and becomes financially desperate, he takes a bank and several of its employees hostage, setting the stage for a tense confrontation with the police. One of Michael Kenneth Williams’ final films. Critics liked it at 79% fresh, audiences gave it a 78%, but on Comscore/Screen Engine’s PostTrak it’s a 55%. Those who attended were 53% guys, 47% between 18-34, 50% over 35 with 50% Caucasian, 24% Black, 16% Latino and Hispanic, and 10% Asian/other. iPic had top four of the top ten runs, but numbers, I hear, weren’t very good overall.

 

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