Alien: Romulus, the latest instalment in the 45-year-old franchise, opened in first place at the North American box office. The 20th Century Studios release earned an estimated US$41.5-million in its first weekend, where it was playing in 3,885 locations in the U.S. and Canada.
Including US$66.7-million from international showings in 49 markets, Alien: Romulus boasted a US$108.2-million global debut. The Walt Disney Co., which owns 20th Century Studios, claimed the top two spots on the charts, with Marvel’s Deadpool & Wolverine now in its fourth weekend, taking second place with US$29-million. The company has been responsible for an estimated 42 per cent of the industry’s summer box office haul, including hits Inside Out 2 and Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.
August can often be slow for the movie business, or, less charitably, a dumping ground. But while 2024 has lagged overall for the movie business, a string of recent hits including Deadpool & Wolverine and It Ends With Us helped build a momentum that put this late August weekend over 30 per cent ahead of the same weekend last year. It’s also up over 10 per cent from August, 2019.
“The summer started off pretty gloomy, but it’s winding up really strong,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. “We thought we were going to coast through August, but now we’re powering through August towards a much better overall summer number than we expected for the box office.”
Ranking the Alien movies, from most disgustingly bad to most revoltingly good
Fede Alvarez directed Alien: Romulus, set around the time of Alien and Aliens, and recruited a cast of up-and-coming twentysomethings to lead the cast including Cailee Spaeny, David Jonsson and Isabela Merced. The sci-fi film leans into Alvarez’s propensity for all things horror, as he is known for Evil Dead and Don’t Breathe, and embraces the franchise’s horror roots.
Reviews have been a little mixed, but mostly positive, with an 81 per cent on Rotten Tomatoes. Audiences gave it a B+ CinemaScore.
The romantic drama It Ends With Us landed in third place with US$24-million, down just 52 per cent from its triumphant opening. The Sony movie starring Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni, who also directed, has made US$97.8-million to date. It cost only US$25-million to produce.
The film was adapted from the bestselling Colleen Hoover novel of the same name that follows Lively as Lily Bloom, a woman at a crossroads when a past love upends her current relationship with Baldoni’s Ryle Kincaid.
Rumours of behind-the-scenes drama on the film also continues to dominate social media discourse and tabloid headlines – but Don’t Worry Darling also taught us that gossip and chatter don’t always translate to box office returns.
Twisters placed fourth in its fifth weekend with US$9.8-million from 3,483 theatres. The Universal release has made over US$238.4-million domestically.
Rounding out the top five was a re-release: Coraline, which Fathom Events put on over 1,500 screens for its 15th anniversary where it made US$11.3-million in four days and US$8.6-million from Friday through Sunday. The stop-motion animated film was an adaptation of a Neil Gaiman novella, written and directed by Henry Selick and marked the first-ever release for Laika. It’ll be in theatres until Aug. 22.
Borderlands, the video game adaptation starring Cate Blanchett, Kevin Hart and Jamie Lee Curtis, brought in US$2.4-million in its second weekend bringing its total box office earnings to US$13.5-million compared to its reported US$120-million budget.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.
- Alien: Romulus, US$41.5-million.
- Deadpool & Wolverine, US$29-million.
- It Ends With Us, US$24-million.
- Twisters, US$9.8-million.
- Coraline, US$8.6-million.
- Despicable Me 4, US$6-million.
- Trap, US$3.4-million.
- Inside Out 2, US$3.2-million.
- Borderlands, US$2.4-million.
- Stree 2, US$2.2-million.