'Halloween Ends' starts strong, topping N.America box office
Universal scarefest "Halloween Ends" scored a strong start this weekend, topping the North American box office with an estimated take of $41.3 million, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations reported Sunday.
The movie, ostensibly the last in a long string of profitable "Halloween" films, again stars Jamie Lee Curtis in a tale replete with throat-slashing, choking, fatal falls and a mysterious masked sewer-dweller.
Analysts had predicted a somewhat higher number: $50 million or so. But given the film's simultaneous release on the Peacock streaming service and its production cost of just $30 million, its take was "excellent," said David A. Gross of Franchise Entertainment Research.
The weeks before Halloween always smile on horror films -- and this weekend another gruesome film, Paramount's "Smile," placed second at $12.4 million. Sosie Bacon stars as a therapist whose grasp on reality is shaken by a horrifying event.
In third place for the Friday-through-Sunday period, down one spot from its release last weekend, was Sony's live action/computer-animated musical comedy "Lyle, Lyle Crocodile," at $7.4 million. Javier Bardem, Shawn Mendes and Constance Wu star.
Another Sony film, history-inspired "The Woman King," held tight at fourth place, with $3.7 million in ticket sales. Viola Davis stars as the leader of an all-female army of African warriors.
And in fifth, dropping two spots, was 20th Century's comedy thriller "Amsterdam," at $2.9 million. It stars Christian Bale, Margot Robbie and John David Washington.
Rounding out the top 10 were:
"Don't Worry Darling" ($2.2 million)
"Barbarian" ($1.4 million)
"Bros" ($920,000)
"Terrifier 2" ($850,000)
"Top Gun: Maverick" ($685,000)
T.McGilberry--NG