After several quiet weeks in movie theaters, four films entered wide release over the weekend. âPAW Patrol: The Mighty Movieâ came out the top dog, with $23 million in ticket sales, according to studio estimates Sunday.
The performances of all four films â âPAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie,â âSaw X,â âThe Creatorâ and âDumb Moneyâ â told a familiar story at the box office. What worked? Horror and animated franchises. What didnât? Originality and comedy.
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âPAW Patrol,â from Paramount Pictures and Spin Master, had timing on its side. The film, a sequel to the 2021 âPAW Patrolâ movie adapted from the Nickelodeon TV series, was the first family animated movie in theaters since âTeenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhemâ was released in early August.
The first âPAW Patrol,â released during the pandemic, debuted with $13 million while simultaneously releasing on Paramount+, and its success in both arenas was a contributing factor in leading Nickelodeon chief Brian Robbins to be named head of Paramount. A third âPAW Patrolâ movie has already been green-lit.
âPaw Patrol: The Mighty Movie,â which cost $30 million to make, added $23.1 million in overseas sales.
âSaw X,â the tenth release in the long-running horror series, managed to bounce back from a franchise low with an opening weekend of $18 million for Lionsgate. The previous âSawâ movie, 2021's âSpiral,â starring Chris Rock, debuted with $8.8 million and totaled $23.3 million domestically.
But the 10th âSawâ doubled back on gore and brought back Tobin Bell as the serial killer Jigsaw. It came away with the franchiseâs best opening weekend in more than a decade and strong audience scores.
The $13-million production was also the widest âSawâ release yet, playing in 3,262 theaters. Since James Wanâs 2004 original, the âSawâ franchise â the flagship series of so-called torture porn -- has made more than $1 billion worldwide.
âThe Creator,â an $80 million movie financed by New Regency and distributed by Disneyâs 20th Century Studios, was easily the biggest film to launch in theaters over the weekend but struggled to catch on. It grossed a modest $14 million at 3,680 theaters while adding $18.3 million internationally.
The film, directed by Gareth Edwards, stars John David Washington as an undercover operative in an AI-dominated future. âThe Creatorâ drew mostly positive reviews and a B+ CinemaScore from audiences.
Sony Picturesâ âDumb Money,â expanded nationwide after two weeks of limited release but failed to ignite the kind of populist movement it irreverently dramatizes. The film, directed by Craig Gillespie, came away with a disappointing $3.5 million in 2,837 locations.
âDumb Money,â starring an ensemble of Paul Dano, Pete Davidson, Seth Rogen, American Ferrera and Anthony Ramos, turns the GameStop stock frenzy into a ripped-from-the-headlines underdog tale of amateur traders rattling Wall Street. While all of the weekendâs new releases were hampered by the ongoing SAG-AFTRA strike, âDumb Moneyâ would have especially benefitted from its cast hitting late-night shows and other promotions.
Made for $30 million, âDumb Moneyâ wasnât a massive bet. But it represented the kind of movie â a mid-budget, acclaimed original mostly targeted at adults â that Hollywood seldom makes anymore. As the industry enters an awards season a year after many high-profile contenders (among them âTĂĄrâ and âThe Fabelmansâ) failed to catch on in theaters, the results for âDumb Moneyâ may be cautionary for films queuing up.
The weekendâs other notable success came from a four-decade-old concert film. The 4K restoration of the Talking Heads concert film âStop Making Senseâ made $1 million on 786 screens, and surely led all movies in the number of dancing moviegoers. The Jonathan Demme film has surpassed $3 million thus far. Indie distributor A24 promised it will âhave audiences dancing in the aisles around the world for a very long time to come.â
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.
1. âPAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie,â $23 million.
2. âSaw X,â $18 million.
3. âThe Creator,â $14 million.
4. âThe Nun II,â $4.7 million.
5. âThe Blind,â $4.1 million.
6. âA Haunting in Venice,â $3.8 million.
7. âDumb Money,â $3.5 million.
8. âThe Equalizer,â $2.7 million.
9. âExpend4bles,â $2.5 million.
10. âBarbie,â $1.4 million.
