On top of the large domestic showing, Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse brought in $88.5 million overseas, bringing its global total for the weekend to $208.6 million, Sony Pictures Entertainment said.
The highly anticipated sequel to Sony‘s “Spider-Man: Into
the Spider-Verse” swung to the top of the domestic box office this weekend,
launching to a massive $120.5 million, according to estimates from the studio
and measurement firm Comscore.
The animated comic-book adaptation far exceeded early box
office projections in the $80 million range. The superhero movie’s sleeper-hit
of a predecessor debuted at $35.4 million in 2018.
Internationally, “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse”
opened to $88.1 million for a global cumulative of $208.6 million — a
record-high number for Sony Animation.
“First of all, you never want to underestimate Spider-Man,”
said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore.
“And you never want to underestimate the power of a PG-rated
animated film to draw a huge audience. ... This combines two genres: animation
and superhero. And that’s pretty irresistible. And the PG rating gives it the
ability to draw in an even younger crowd to the Spider-Man universe.”
“Across the Spider-Verse” notched the second-biggest
domestic opening of 2023 behind Universal Pictures’ “The Super Mario Bros.
Movie” — which launched at $146.4 million in April and has since amassed $566.3
million in the United States and Canada alone.
Dergarabedian believes the combined box-office success of
“Spider-Verse,” “Super Mario Bros.” and “Puss in Boots: The Last Wish” — which
has raked in hundreds of millions for Universal since its December debut —
proves that the animated family film is a force to be reckoned with.
“I think we’re looking at a renaissance period for PG-rated
animated films — a genre and rating that perhaps has been marginalized ... or
underestimated in the past,” Dergarabedian said.
“With the pandemic, I think a lot of people thought, ‘Well,
families aren’t going to go to the unsafe environment of a movie theater.’ ...
But certainly they are back.”
In addition to animated PG fare being sidelined
historically, Dergarabedian added that perceived superhero-movie fatigue might
have also contributed to analysts’ low (in hindsight) expectations for “Across
the Spider-Verse.” Underwhelming box-office performances (Warner Bros.’
“Shazam! Fury of the Gods”) and bad reviews (“Shazam! Fury of the Gods,”
Disney’s “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania,” Warner Bros.’ “Black Adam”) for
recent superhero titles could suggest that audiences and critics are growing
tired of the genre.
“But I actually don’t think that’s true,” Dergarabedian
said.
“I don’t think audiences are fatigued by a genre. I think
audiences just don’t necessarily respond if the movie doesn’t deliver. ... This
movie — on all accounts from everything I’ve read and heard — really delivers.
And the first film, ‘Into the Spider-Verse,’ ... a terrific movie,
well-reviewed ... set up this movie.”
A slew of headlines painted Marvel as a franchise in
trouble. The full picture is more complicated — but for some, the frustration
is all too real.
Dergarabedian also noted that a leap this dramatic in
opening-weekend ticket sales from an original movie to a sequel is “somewhat rare.”
“Usually with sequels, it’s the law of diminishing returns,
not the law of increasing returns,” he said.
“But that building of momentum ... sustaining that interest
in the Spider-Man character ... puts the Spider-Man brand in the pantheon of
must-see superhero characters.”
The ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’ filmmakers discuss
Spider-Gwen, Earth-65 and how the film reworks an old trope to create a story
line worthy of her.
Directed by Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers and Justin K.
Thompson, “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse” reunites Miles Morales (Shameik
Moore) and Gwen Stacy (Hailee Steinfeld) for another epic journey through the
multiverse. Supporting cast members include Issa Rae, Brian Tyree Henry, Luna
Lauren Vélez, Jake Johnson, Jason Schwartzman, Karan Soni, Daniel Kaluuya and
Oscar Isaac.
The follow-up to “Into the Spider-Verse” — which dazzled
critics and won the Academy Award for animated feature in 2019 — appears to
have done it again, scoring a fantastic 95% fresh rating on review aggregation
site Rotten Tomatoes. The blockbuster has yet to receive a grade from audiences
polled by CinemaScore.
“‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’ ... contains every
element of what made the first one so compelling,” writes film critic Katie
Walsh for the Tribune News Service.
“A breathlessly beautiful achievement not just in animation
but also comic book movie storytelling, ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’
is willing to shred the lore from top to bottom and weave it back together
again in new, surprising and wildly entertaining ways. It’s simply
spectacular.”
Animated shot of Gwen Stacy in white super suit, hanging
upside down as Miles Morales hangs nearby in black suit.
“Spider-Man” producers reportedly said that a Miles Morales
live-action film and an animated standalone “Spider-Woman” movie are on the
way.
Rounding out the top three at the domestic box office this
weekend were Disney’s live-action remake of “The Little Mermaid,” which added
$40.6 million in its sophomore outing for a North American total of $186.2
million; and 20th Century Studios’ “The Boogeyman,” which bowed at $12.3
million — just short of its projected $15-million debut.
Helmed by Rob Savage, “The Boogeyman” stars Chris Messina,
Vivien Lyra Blair and Sophie Thatcher as a grieving family tormented by a
supernatural monster. Hollywood’s latest Stephen King adaptation garnered a
mediocre 62% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a B-minus grade from audiences
polled by CinemaScore.
“Unremarkable adaptations of Stephen King are practically
their own category, and every time interest fades in doing right by him
onscreen, a hit comes along ... to inspire more attempts,” writes film critic
Robert Abele for The Times.
“But the resulting expansion falls prey to that iffiest of
modern-day horror movie conventions: an ‘opening up’ narrative that too often
feels like a shutting down of what’s truly scary.”
Paramount Pictures’ “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts” opens
in wide release next weekend.