‘Wakanda Forever’ Posts $67M Second Weekend; ‘The Menu’ Rises Over ‘Chosen’; No Noise For ‘She Said’ – Sunday Box Office Update

‘Wakanda Forever’ Posts $67M Second Weekend; ‘The Menu’ Rises Over ‘Chosen’; No Noise For ‘She Said’ – Sunday Box Office Update

SUNDAY WRITETHRU after Saturday Update, refresh for chart and more analysis: Black Panther: Wakanda Forevers second weekend is coming in lower than its projected $70M+ with $67.3M, -63%. That’s not necessarily something to get worried about, however, as sources keep telling me this pic’s running time is what’s slowing it down a bit. At the same time, that second weekend is slightly ahead of Black Adam‘s $67M opening weekend. On the bright side, it’s Thanksgiving week, and if people aren’t seeing Wakanda Forever this weekend, then they’re making an appointment to see it sometime this week, hands down. Furthermore, there was always bound to be a steep drop in the Friday-to-Friday coming off the Veterans Day holiday and previews a week ago, that number being -79% for $17.9M Friday. Even though the running total for Wakanda Forever at $288M today will be 2% behind Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness at the same point in time, let’s see where the Ryan Coogler-directed stands by the end of next Sunday.

‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ (Marvel Studios) Marvel

Greatly missing from this weekend? Another tentpole that typically precedes the Thanksgiving stretch before a Disney Turkey Day family title. This is the weekend where Harry Potter sequels have opened, as well as Justice League. The thing is, no one likes to program a tentpole in the wake of a Marvel movie, and Wakanda Forever didn’t launch during the first weekend of November. In regards to when we’ll be back at a steady supply of tentpoles, it won’t be until March 10, which is when Paramount and Spyglass have the next Scream. Yes, there’s Disney/Marvel’s Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania on Feb. 17, but it’s no-stop films for everybody starting in March all the way through summer up until The Nun 2 in the post-Labor Day space.

(From left) Zoe Kazan), Carey Mulligan), Andre Braugher and Rebecca Corbett in ‘She Said’ (Searchlight) JoJo Whilden/Universal Pictures

With a production cost of $30M, She Said is doing the worse of the two studio attempts at adults with $2.25M opening at 2,022 theaters. A few things: First, bravo for Universal for having the audacity to get behind an important #MeToo adaptation about The New York Times’ takedown of Harvey Weinstein. It’s not on streaming, it’s on the big screen, and at the end of the day it’s about this pic’s tail in home entertainment, especially as it ratchets up buzz among awards voters. That’s where this film will be watched. Uni launched She Said during Thanksgiving week in an attempt to get as many people as they could. Those who watched gave the film an A CinemaScore and 89% positive on Comscore/Screen Engine’s PostTrak.

In the same breath, there never was an audience for this newsroom-meets-Hollywood drama outside those in the industry moviegoers in NYC and LA. Given the wonky turnout of adults during the post-pandemic, if a studio knows it doesn’t have any pulse for a film at 100%, they’re not going to spend, so it stands to reason the promo push for this Carey Mulligan-Zoe Kazan movie is in its awards ledger, not theatrical. At the end of the day, and to all studio and streamers’ benefit as we come out of the pandemic: Poor ticket sales don’t dilute your awards-seasons chances on a film anymore. As far as the future of crossover titles, specifically those that gain momentum off awards-season steam — well, that’s another story.

Demos on She Said were 62% women, 82% over 25, 59% over 35, 46% over 45, and 29% over 55. Diversity demos were 68% Caucasian, 15% Latino and Hispanic, 7% Black and 10% Asian and other.

From left: Nicholas Hoult, Reed Birney, Anya Taylor-Joy, Janet McTeer, Paul Adelstein, Arturo Castro, Rob Yang, Mark St. Cyr, John Leguizamo in ‘’ (Everett Collection)

The Menu rises to a $9M opening, 4x that of She Said, besting faith-based The Chosen for No. 2 and also coming in ahead of the start of Searchlight’s 2019 summer genre movie Ready or Not. That movie legged out to $28.7M off of a B+ CinemaScore, and Menu has a B. It’ OK. Difference between the films is that Menu cost a reported $30M we hear with its star lineup of Anya Taylor Joy, Ralph Fiennes and John Leguziamo versus Ready or Not‘s $6M before P&A. PostTrak for Menu was more severe at 78% and 53% definite recommend. At the end of the day, The Menu will have a better tail than She Said.

Look, Menu is an edgy arthouse film, much like 2019’s Midsommar, which ended at $27.4M. If Menu ends its domestic run in the Midsommar and Ready or Not range, it will have done its job. Searchlight was smart to open the pic during a week when it potentially could capture the most audience versus early December before Christmas. It’s guy-leaning at 54%, 65% between 17-34 (remember, if arthouse thrives going forward, it’s on this demo). Diversity pull was 53% Caucasian, 20% Latino and Hispanic, 12% Black and 15% Asian/other. The West and Southwest were the best markets for Menu, with six of the top 10 theaters from those areas. Brooklyn Alamo was No. 1 on Friday.

Is adult counterprogramming dead? No. These are dark, niche films aimed at upscale audiences. Furthermore, the closing of Landmark on Pico and the Arclight Hollywood is like ripping the heart out of the tin man when it comes to the specialty box office. Remember what we wrote about product being the key driver to arthouses? What could still work? Broad-appealing adult movies like Ford v. Ferrari, which launched over the pre-Thanksgiving space back in 2019 and made its way to $117.6M. Warner Bros.’ Elvis proved this summer that there’s still appetite for broad -appealing, upbeat, vibrant original movies for adults. So don’t get cynical.

A faith-based title overperforming in a pre-holiday space is nothing exceptional, but to be expected. The Bible Belt South and Midwest are strong here. Dallas, Salt Lake City, Houston, Phoenix and Tampa are top markets for Chosen.

CHART IS UPDATING….

1) Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Dis), 4,396 theaters, Fri $17.9M (-79%),, 3-day $67.3M (-63%)/Total: $288M/Wk 2

2.) The Menu (Sea), 3,211 theaters Fri $3.6M, 3-day $9M/Wk 1

3.) The Chosen: Season 3 (Fath) 2012 theaters, Fri $3.48M, 3-day $8.2M/Wk 1

4.) Black Adam (WB) 3,372 (-231) theaters, Fri $1.15M (-59%), 3-day $4.1M (-49%), Total $156.6M/Wk 5

5.) Ticket to Paradise (Uni) 3,268 (-372) theaters, Fri $960K (-56%), 3 day $3.1M (-47%), Total $61.4M/Wk 5

6.) She Said (Uni), 2,022 theaters, Fri $830K, 3-day $2.25M/Wk 1

7.) Lyle, Lyle Crocodile (Sony) 2,307 (-179) theaters, Fri $410K, 3-day $1.78M (-44%), Total $43M/Wk 7

8.) Smile (Par) 1,569 (-702) theaters, Fri $335K, 3-day $1.14M (-51%)/Total $104.5M/Wk 8

9.) Prey for the Devil (LG) 1,389 (-775) theaters, Fri $263K, 3-day $900K (-53%), Total $18.2M/Wk 4

10.) Drishyam 2 (Yash Raj) Fri $280K, 3-day $690K, Wk 1

Total box office for the weekend: est. $102.1M (-51% from a week ago; +45% from weekend 46 a year ago, -6% from the same frame in 2019.

FRIDAY AFTERNOON UPDATE: Disney and Marvel Studios’ Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is eyeing a 65% second weekend decline at this point, which would translate to about $64M after a Friday with $17M-$19M. The pic has a shot at hitting $70M. The 10-day running total for Wakanda Forever at its current rate would land at $284.7M at 4,396 theaters, 3% behind Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness at the same point.

What Wakanda has that the Doctor did not is 45% K-12 schools out and 17% colleges on Monday heading to everyone off on Thanksgiving and Black Friday. Note that Black Friday typically is an enormous box office day. Expect Black Panther 2 to lead over the Wednesday-Sunday holiday spread.

‘The Chosen’, courtesy of Fathom Events

A very strong No. 2 is The Chosen: Season 3, of which Fathom Events is showing off episodes 1 & 2 at 2,012 theaters. It’s looking at $3.7M today and $10M for the weekend. Logline for the third season of Angel Studios’ drama: Jesus completes a sermon that turns the world upside down, all 12 disciples (including newcomer Judas) are ready to follow him to the ends of the earth. But problems remain. Matthew wrestles with estrangement from his family. Andrew visits an imprisoned John the Baptist. Mary and the women must find a source of income. Simon and Eden face the costs of following Jesus. Most importantly, the disciples face their biggest challenge yet when Jesus sends them out, two by two, to preach and perform miracles without him.

Searchlight’s The Menu is looking at $8M, with the possibility of emulating Barbarian and crossing $10M. It’s doing at least $3M today including previews at 3,211 theaters.

(from left) Megan Twohey (Carey Mulligan) and Jodi Kantor (Zoe Kazan) in She Said, directed by Maria Schrader. JoJo Whilden/Universal Pictures

Fourth place goes to New Line/DC’s Black Adam at 3,372 theaters, with a $915K fifth Friday, $3.4M weekend, -58% and running total of $155.9M by Sunday.

Fifth goes to Universal’s Ticket to Paradise at 3,268 theaters, which is seeing a fifth Friday of $880K, $2.9M weekend and running total of $61.2M. The George Clooney-Julia Roberts romantic comedy also is available on PVOD.

Universal’s newsroom/Harvey Weinstein drama She Said at 2,022 theaters is spotting $800K and a $2.25M opening in sixth place.

'The Menu'
Anya Taylor-Joy in ‘The Menu’ Searchlight

PREVIOUS FRIDAY AM EXCLUSIVE: Searchlight’s absurdist genre horror comedy The Menu got off to a promising start with $1M+ in Thursday night previews, we hear. That number is up there with recent comps such as Barbarian, which did $850K on its Thursday night before a $10.5M opening, and The Northman, another Anya Taylor-Joy movie, which posted $1.35M before a $12.2M start.

RELATED: ‘The Menu’ Trailer: Anya Taylor-Joy & Nicholas Hoult Drawn Into A Chef’s Deadly Game In Searchlight’s Horror-Comedy

The opening weekend estimate for director Mark Mylod’s The Menu, which also stars Ralph Fiennes, Nicholas Hoult, John Leguizamo and others, is around $8M. If this movie gets to $10M, it would be a nice oasis for counterprogramming in the face of Disney and Marvel Studios’ mammoth sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever ,which is expected to do a second weekend in the $70M range. That preview number for The Menu includes some cash from Wednesday and previews that began at 5 p.m. Thursday. The pic is 91% certified fresh on Rotten Tomatoes and currently has a good audience score of 83%.

Wakanda Forever posted a $7.5M Thursday, -8% from Wednesday, for a first week of $220.7M. The pic crossed $400M worldwide Wednesday.

She Said, Universal’s movie about the New York Times reporters who exposed movie mogul Harvey Weinstein, isn’t expected to do much this weekend, in the low single digits. Previews from 1,600 theaters that began at 5 p.m. were only $160K. Remember, despite any low grosses from these arthouse-type films in the post-pandemic era, their awards-season chances won’t be slowed. I mean, some of the big awards contenders don’t even report their box office grosses. She Said is 85% certified fresh critics score on Rotten Tomatoes and has a 92% audience score from the few who’ve seen it.

RELATED: ‘She Said’ NYFF Review: Maria Schrader Film Chronicles Two Women On The Hunt For The Truth