Posted on 02/18/2018 11:23:05 AM PST by SMGFan
Dominating the weekend and delivering one of the largest opening weekends of all-time, Disney and Marvel's Black Panther topped the President's Day weekend box office, outperforming its nearest competitor by nearly $175 million based on estimates. As a result, fellow new wide releases were left in the dust with both Lionsgate's Early Man and PureFlix's Samson struggling in the low single digits. The weekend did, however, have other notable performances such as Sony's Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, which became the studio's second highest grossing domestic release of all-time, and Fox's The Greatest Showman, which has now topped $150 million at the domestic box office.
Atop the weekend box office with an estimated $192 million for the three-day weekend, Black Panther delivered the fifth largest three-day domestic opening in history and is currently expected to finish around $218 million for the four-day holiday weekend. The performance is also the largest February opening of all-time, the largest President's Day weekend opening of all-time and gives Disney eight of the top ten domestic openings of all-time. Within the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Black Panther is the eighteenth release in the franchise and the ninth to open with over $100 million. It's also the second largest opening in the MCU, behind only The Avengers ($207.4m) and topping the $191 million debut for Avengers: Age of Ultron.
(Excerpt) Read more at boxofficemojo.com ...
“Throw in easy access to a theater as well. In 1939 some folks may have been a hundred miles from the nearest theater and movies were a rare treat.”
Especially in the Midwest and West. Even today movie theaters are few and far between in Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming, the Dakotas, parts of Minnesota, New Mexico and some other places.
Economically movies weren’t the first choice for entertainment for most people.
A very rare treat!
FrankR, great retort! Thanks for the good laugh. I like your style.
JoMa
The Black Panther was a Marvel comics character well before Huey Newton and Bobby Seale stole the name.
Yes, I know. So what? Connotations don’t change over time? Of course they do.
I am not sure what movie started things being different and pushing the envelope but it could have been “Blow Up” with David Hemmings in 1966. Although that film was pretty tame compared to “Midnight Cowboy” in 1968.
Maybe you didn’t see “Titanic,” which by far the most overrated movie.
I saw on the news some white women raving about the movie and getting donations and arranging to transport loads of children to watch the movie.
“Where are the white women at?”
One of the few quotes from the movie that can be posted in polite company.
It would be difficult to choose the most overrated movie, though Id put another Cameron film up there: Avatar. No doubt there are lots of people who think thats a great film, but I thought it was a simplistic, heavy-handed, preachy movie, with much of the scenery copied from World of Warcraft (the MMORPG, not the film). Apart from some good special effects, I found very little to like about it.
I just want to state here that I’m a big fan of Marvel movies, television and of course their comics, which I’ve been reading for 50+ years.
I follow all the announcements by Marvel over the past few years about the MCU—Marvel Cinematic Universe, and the Black Panther movie has been in the works for some time.
If it is over hyped it is not by Marvel. People here need to let it be. It was not written to be an anti-white movie, for God sakes!
It’s been around as an idea since Capt America Winter Soldier, Deadpool, Antman and Iron Man 3.
Stop promoting it just because it is black. Stop degrading it just because it is black. Wakanda was always a place in the comics—it is where vibranium comes from; in Africa below the Sahara Desert. And guess what?
Africa below the Sahara is black.
Really, Marvel/Disney didn’t make that up just to appease BLM!
Seemed it was some kind of community center (Iowa?). I wasn’t interested and switched it off. One woman did the talking, said something about seeing different kind of people in films.
yes, sometimes people want things to fit their narrative.
Possibly. I think also WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF, which had strong (for its time) language & adult content. Also, the hippie movement was just starting.
By 1967 the decadence was underway; we had morally bankrupt films like BONNIE & CLYDE and THE GRADUATE.
When adjusted for inflation, these movies cant touch GWTW. Of course, that does include the various rereleases of GWTW that have happened over the decades. You can go to Box Office Mojo and look at an adjusted list, and the top 10 is a quite different story.
The guys making these movies are too stupid to even know when they put out a deeply conservative movie. I understand Firefly was very conservative in spite of the fact that Joss Whedon is a leftist nutbag. He doesnt even get it. Same with the guy who plays Captain America who is apparently mostly leftist because his brother likes dudes.
Its because the BLM crowd is acting like it is a watershed moment in radical black history and that its success will validate their movement. Some of us would have liked to have seen that effort fail, but the movie was a success, so time to move on.
Agreed.
This site used to be about conservatism, individual rights, liberty. Much less so now.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.