‘Hunger Games’ feasts, ‘Napoleon’ conquers but ‘Wish’ doesn’t come true at Thanksgiving box office
‘Napoleon’ outperformed expectations to take $32.5 million over the five-day weekend and an estimated $20.4 million Friday through Sunday
The Walt Disney Co.’s Wish had been expected to rule the Thanksgiving weekend box office, but moviegoers instead feasted on leftovers, as The Hunger Games: Songbirds and Snakes led ticket sales for the second weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday.
Neither of the weekend’s top new releases — Wish and Ridley Scott’s Napoleon — could keep up with Lionsgate’s Hunger Games prequel. After debuting the previous weekend with $44.6 million, the return to Panem proved the top draw for holiday moviegoers, grossing $28.8 million over the weekend and $42 million over the five-day holiday frame.
In two weeks of release, Songbirds and Snakes has grossed nearly $100 million domestically and $200 million globally.
The closer contest was for second place, where Napoleon narrowly outmaneuvered Wish. Scott’s epic outperformed expectations to take $32.5 million over the five-day weekend and an estimated $20.4 million Friday through Sunday. The film, starring Joaquin Phoenix as the French emperor and Vanessa Kirby as his wife Joséphine de Beauharnais, was also the top movie globally with $78.8 million.
Reviews were mixed (61% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) and ticket buyers were non-plussed (a B- CinemaScore), but Napoleon fared far better in theaters than its subject did at Waterloo.
Napoleon, like Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, is a big-budget statement by Apple Studios of the streamer’s swelling Hollywood ambitions. With an estimated budget of $200 million, Napoleon may still have a long road to reach profitability for Apple (which partnered with Sony to distribute Napoleon theatrically), but it’s an undeniably strong beginning for an adult-skewing 168-minute historical drama.
Wish, however, had been supposed to have a more starry-eyed start. Disney Animation releases like Frozen II ($123.7 million over five days in 2019), Ralph Breaks the Internet ($84.6 million in 2018) and Coco ($71 million in 2017), have often owned Thanksgiving moviegoing.
But Wish wobbled, coming in with $31.7 million over five days and $19.5 million Friday through Sunday.
Wish, at least, is faring better than Disney’s Thanksgiving release last year: 2022′s Strange World bombed with a five-day $18.9 million opening. But hopes had been higher for Wish, co-written and co-directed by the Frozen team of Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee and featuring the voices of Ariana DeBose and Chris Pine. Wish, a fairy tale centered around a wished-upon star, is also a celebration of Disney, itself, timed to the studio’s 100th anniversary and rife with callbacks to Disney favorites.
But instead of righting an up-and-down year for Disney, Wish is, for now, adding to some of the studio’s recent headaches, including the underperforming The Marvels. The Marvel sequel has limped to $76.9 million domestically and $110.2 million overseas in three weeks.
Still, the storybook isn’t written yet on Wish. It could follow the lead of Pixar’s Elemental, which launched with a lukewarm $29.6 million in June but found its legs, ultimately grossing nearly $500 million worldwide.
Wish also faced direct competition for families in Trolls Band Together. The DreamWorks and Universal Pictures release opened a week prior, and took in $17.5 million in its second frame ($25.3 million over five days).
Also entering wide-release over the holiday weekend was Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn, the writer-director’s follow-up to 2020′s Promising Young Woman. After debuting in seven packed theaters last weekend, Saltburn grossed about $3 million over five days for Amazon and MGM. Barry Keoghan stars as an Oxford student befriended by a rich classmate (Jacob Elordi) and invited to his family’s country manor.
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