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Sunday, January 26, 2020

Weekend Box-Office: BAD BOYS Holds at #1 and Tops $200M Worldwide

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"Bad Boys For Life" continues to dominate the box-office and looks primed to become the biggest January release of all time. Meanwhile, the new Guy Ritchie film "The Gentlemen" scored a decent debut, while the supernatural horror film "The Turning" failed to impress.

Find out more about the weekend box-office after the jump.







Sony's "Bad Boys" threequel scored $34 million in its second weekend, and only dropped 45.6%. The film's domestic tally has reached $120.6 million after ten days, while overseas it has already delivered a total of $95 million, topping $200 million worldwide and well on its way to becoming the highest grossing installment in the Jerry Bruckheimer-produced trilogy.

The Oscar-nominated war epic "1917" dropped just 28% and finished the weekend in second place with $15.8 million. The film has grossed $103.8 million, so far, domestically, and a total of $96.6 million overseas.

The family film "Dolittle" landed in third place with $12.5 million after a soft-ish 43% drop in its second weekend. For a flop it's actually performing better than expected, and it has grossed $44.6 million so far in the U.S. and $46.4 million overseas. If it wasn't for that pesky $175 million price tag, the film could have been a moderate success.

In fourth place we find the first new wide release, Guy Ritchie's "The Gentlemen", which opened with $11 million from 2,165 theaters. This performance convinced STX to give the film a wider release next week. It also opened in 20 additional markets overseas and raked in $3.1 million over the weekend, for an international cume of $22.5 million. "The Gentlemen" received a positive reception from both critics (72% on Rotten Tomatoes) and moviegoers ("B+" from CinemaScore's polls and 87% Audience Score on Rotten Tomatoes).

The Top 5 is rounded out by Sony's "Jumanji: The Next Level" which dropped just 18.6% and grossed $7.9 million this weekend for a domestic total of $283.4 million. Overseas it added another $9.6 million, and its international tally has reached $454 million, adding up to a worldwide cume that is now at $738 million.

The other new wide release, the Steven Spielberg executive produced horror film "The Turning" flopped in sixth place with $7.3 million from 2,571. Of course, "flopped" might be too strong a word for a film that cost only $14 million to produce, but with a very negative critical reception (13% on Rotten Tomatoes), and an equally disastrous reaction from moviegoers (a rare "F" from CinemaScore's polls and 14% Audience Score on Rotten Tomatoes), the film has no hope of lasting too long in the Top 10.

In other news, "Parasite" has now become Neon's highest grossing domestic release of all-time with $31 million, and Roadside's true story war drama "The Last Full Measure" opened outside the Top 10 with $1.05 million from 614 theaters.




New Wide Releases: "The Gentlemen" "The Turning", "The Last Full Measure".

Biggest Drop : "Bad Boys For Life" (-45.6%)

Smallest Drop : "Knives Out" (-14.7%)

Rank Title Weekend Gross Domestic Total Foreign Total Budget
1 Bad Boys For Life $34M $120.6M $95M $90M
2 1917 $15.8M $103.8M $96.6M $100M
3 Dolittle $12.5M $44.6M $46.4M $175M
4 The Gentlemen $11M $11M $22.5M N/A
5 Jumanji: The Next Level $7.9M $283.4M $454M $125M
6 The Turning $7.3M $7.3M $0.8M $14M
7 Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker $5.1M $501.5M $544.6M $275M
8 Little Women $4.7M $93.7M $53M $40M
9 Just Mercy $4M $27M $3.4M N/A
10 Knives Out $3.6M $151.8M $131.5M $40M









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