Showbiz
‘Venom: The Last Dance’ takes US$51m and tops N. American box office, Halloween horror ‘Smile 2’ close behind
(From left) British actress Juno Temple, US actor Chiwetel Ejiofor, British filmmaker Kelly Marcel and British actor Tom Hardy attend the world premiere of ‘Venom: The Last Dance’ at the Regal Times Square in New York October 21, 2024. — AFP pic

LOS ANGELES, Oct 28 — The new Columbia/Marvel superhero film Venom: The Last Dance failed to match the openings of the series’ two previous episodes but still easily topped the North American box office with ticket sales estimated at US$51 million (RM222 million), industry watchers said.

Venom: Let There Be Carnage, the follow-up to the original Venom, had enjoyed a US$96 million opening weekend in 2021, but Last Dance faced stiff competition for viewers from a baseball World Series featuring the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers.

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Tom Hardy again plays a disgruntled journalist who morphs into a terrifying alien with huge jagged teeth — and what has been described as a Gene Simmons tongue — in a cast that includes Chiwetel Ejiofor, Juno Temple and Rhys Ifans.

With Halloween only days away, meanwhile, Paramount’s horror film Smile 2 slipped just one spot from last weekend’s opening, taking in US$40.7 million, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations said Sunday. Naomi Scott plays a troubled pop star afflicted by a grim curse.

Third place went to the new religious thriller Conclave from FilmNation, with US$6.5 million. Ralph Fiennes, playing a cardinal called on to "manage” the election of a new pope, finds himself caught in shadowy, back-stabbing intrigue while wrestling with questions of his own faith — and ambition.

Stanley Tucci and John Lithgow play fellow cardinals, each with his own agenda, and Isabella Rossellini is a nun of steely countenance.

Analyst David A. Gross said the film, with "sensational critics’ reviews,” is well-positioned in the Oscars Best Picture race. Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front) directed the film, which is based on a Robert Harris thriller.

In fourth, down two spots, was Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s The Wild Robot, about a robot having to get along witih fuzzy woodland creatures after being stranded on a remote island. It took in US$6.5 million.

And hanging steady in fifth was We Live in Time, a romantic drama from StudioCanal, at US$4.8 million. Andrew Garfield and Florence Pugh star. — ETX Studio

Rounding out the top 10 were:

  • Terrifier 3 (US$4.8 million)
  • Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (US$3.2 million)
  • Anora (US$867,000)
  • Piece by Piece (US$720,000)
  • Transformers One (US$720,000)

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