Giornale Roma - 'Woman King' rules N.American box office

NYSE - LSE
RBGPF 0% 73.08 $
CMSC -0.35% 23.09 $
NGG 1.44% 71.56 $
SCS -0.99% 16.2 $
BCC -1.77% 86.62 $
CMSD -0.22% 23.657 $
GSK 0.25% 39.23 $
RIO -1.68% 62.52 $
RYCEF 0.8% 14.92 $
BTI 0.54% 57.42 $
RELX -0.17% 47.69 $
JRI 0.07% 13.41 $
BCE 1.02% 25.37 $
VOD -0.09% 11.64 $
BP 0.95% 34.64 $
AZN 0.68% 78.47 $
'Woman King' rules N.American box office
'Woman King' rules N.American box office / Photo: Paul Morigi - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

'Woman King' rules N.American box office

"The Woman King," an epic about an all-female army of African warriors, easily topped the North American box office this weekend with an estimated take of $19 million, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations reported Sunday.

Text size:

The new Sony release, loosely based on a true historical episode, stars Oscar-winner Viola Davis as the fierce general who leads an army known as the Agojie as it protects the 18th-century kingdom of Dahomey.

Days earlier, Davis told AFP that she felt "conflicted" because if the Black-led, woman-dominated film fell short, it would unfairly damage the prospects for future such endeavors.

Instead, boosted by a favorable critical reception -- "Reviews are sensational," said the FranchiseRe website -- it exceeded analysts' expectations, more than tripling the ticket sales of the next-highest finisher, 20th Century's "Barbarian."

That horror film tells the story of a woman (Georgina Campbell) who checks into an AirBnB rental in a sketchy Detroit neighborhood only to find it has also been booked by an oh-so-creepy Bill Skarsgard. "Barbarian" took in $6.3 million for the Friday-through-Sunday period.

In third place was a slasher film, "Pearl," a new low-budget release from A24, with ticket sales just over $3.1 million. Mia Goth stars in a blood-soaked tale that involves the brutal use of both an axe and a pitchfork, on animals and humans. Enough said.

Searchlight's comic mystery "See How They Run" placed fourth in its opening weekend, at $3.1 million.

Sam Rockwell stars as an often-inebriated Scotland Yard detective, Saoirse Ronan as his eager but hapless assistant, and Adrien Brody as a sleazy Hollywood director in London to make a film version of Agatha Christie classic "The Mousetrap" -- until fate intervenes.

And in fifth place was Sony action thriller "Bullet Train," starring Brad Pitt, at $2.5 million.

Rounding out the top 10 were:

"Top Gun: Maverick" ($2.2 million)

"DC League of Super-Pets" ($2.2 million)

"The Invitation" ($1.7 million)

"Minions: The Rise of Gru" ($1.3 million)

"Moonage Daydream" ($1.2 million)

L.Ferrari--GdR