‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ chomps on big $147-million Fourth of July box office weekend

‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ chomps on big 7-million Fourth of July box office weekend


Dinosaurs ruled the box office once again this weekend as โ€œJurassic World Rebirthโ€ hauled in a strong $147.3 domestically over the five-day Fourth of July period to kick off what industry insiders hope will be an impressive month at movie theaters.

The holiday total for โ€œJurassic Worldโ€ in the U.S. and Canada exceeded industry expectations. Universal Picturesโ€™ โ€œJurassic Worldโ€ reboot was expected to gross $120 million to $130 million during its long opening weekend, according to analyst and studio projections.

The movie unseated Appleโ€™s Brad Pitt racing film โ€œF1 The Movie,โ€ which landed in second place with $26.1 million domestically, bringing its total to $109.5 million in North America, according to distributor Warner Bros.

โ€œRebirthโ€™sโ€ 2022 predecessor, โ€œJurassic World: Dominion,โ€ debuted with $145 million from its first three days of release and went on to collect $1 billion globally. The new movie carries an estimated production budget of $180 million, not counting marketing costs.

Big-budget creature features have global appeal, as the numbers showed. Opening in 82 countries outside the U.S. and Canada, โ€œRebirthโ€ grossed $171 million internationally. That included $41.5 million from China, proving that Hollywood movies can still do well in the Middle Kingdom despite the dominance of local production in the populous country.

The global total for โ€œRebirthโ€™sโ€ opening was $318.3 million.

Directed by Gareth Edwards (โ€œThe Creator,โ€ โ€œRogue Oneโ€) and starring Scarlett Johansson and Mahershala Ali, โ€œRebirthโ€ earned unenthusiastic reviews from critics, notching a 52% approval rating on aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.

The โ€œJurassicโ€ franchise has seen multiple iterations since Steven Spielbergโ€™s 1993 blockbuster โ€œJurassic Park,โ€ based on the popular Michael Crichton science fiction novel, wowed audiences with its combination of practical and computer-generated effects that gave the T. rex and other killer dinos their stunning realism. That film spawned not only sequels but toys, theme park attractions, animated series and video games.

Although the sequels, starting with Spielbergโ€™s own โ€œThe Lost World,โ€ never achieved the acclaim of the original, they continued to mint money for Universal and Spielbergโ€™s production company, Amblin.

Prior to โ€œRebirth,โ€ the โ€œJurassicโ€ movies had grossed a total of roughly $6 billion worldwide, not adjusting for inflation, according to box office website The Numbers. The first โ€œJurassic Parkโ€ grossed $978 million worldwide, according to Box Office Mojo, which is equal to $1.86 billion in todayโ€™s dollars.

The latest โ€œJurassicโ€ movie did not get a slot at Imax theaters, since those were taken up by โ€œF1.โ€ Next week, the valuable Imax real estate will be taken up by Warner Bros. and DC Studiosโ€™ โ€œSuperman.โ€ Films shown on Imax often reap bigger box office numbers, aided in part by the higher ticket prices at those theaters, and because theyโ€™re viewed as more of a must-see event.

โ€œJurassic Worldโ€ is the first of three big tentpole films arriving this month in theaters. In addition to โ€œSuperman,โ€ Walt Disney Co. and Marvel Studiosโ€™ โ€œThe Fantastic Four: First Stepsโ€ opens in a few weeks.

July has historically been one of the strongest summer months at the box office, putting more pressure on these three films to deliver.

Despite big box office gains in April and May, June saw a string of underperforming films such as Lionsgateโ€™s โ€œJohn Wickโ€ spinoff โ€œBallerina,โ€ Sony Picturesโ€™ โ€œKarate Kid: Legendsโ€ and Disney and Pixarโ€™s original animated effort โ€œElio.โ€

Theatrical business in June was 25% lower compared to the pre-pandemic average of June 2017, 2018 and 2019, according to David A. Grossโ€™s FranchiseRe movie industry newsletter. It was also down 5.3% compared to last June, which saw big hits like Disney and Pixarโ€™s โ€œInside Out 2โ€ and Sonyโ€™s โ€œBad Boys: Ride or Die.โ€

โ€œWe see this ebb and flow,โ€ said Shawn Robbins, founder of the website Box Office Theory. โ€œThese next four to five weeks will certainly give us a sense of how to grade the summer overall.โ€

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