Story highlights

"Revenant" tops box office in its third week in wide release

East Coast blizzard hurt grosses

The Hollywood Reporter  — 

Snowzilla couldn’t stop Leonardo DiCaprio.

Alejandro G. Inarritu’s awards frontrunner The Revenant rode to the top of the box-office chart in its third weekend in wide release — the first time the movie has come in No. 1. The frontier epic, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, grossed $16 million from 3,711 theaters for a domestic total of $119.2 million.

The Revenant and other films faced a formidable foe this weekend in winter storm Jonas, which buried a large swath of the Northeast corridor in two feet of snow ore more. Three to four hundred theaters on the East Coast and in North Carolina were forced to close, including in New York City, a pivotal market that contributes as much as 7% of the overall box-office gross.

Analysts project that weekend revenue could be down as much as 12% because of Jonas. Theaters in Washington, D.C., Baltimore and Philadelphia remain dark on Sunday as clean-up efforts begin; it’s unclear whether New York City cinemas will be able to reopen.

The Hollywood Reporter: Winter Storm Jonas Forces Broadway Performance Cancellations on Saturday

“This is about as bad as I can remember. I don’t ever recall such widespread theater closures,” Fox domestic distribution chief Chris Aronson said. “Honestly, I expected Revenant to be No. 1, but I had it doing $19 million, not $16 million.”

Even without snowzilla, none of the weekend’s three new films — Lionsgate’s raunchy, R-rated comedy Dirty Grandpa, supernatural horror film The Boy and Sony’s The 5th Wave — were expected to do big business, although all three came in on the high end of expectations.

That being said, they all placed behind The Revenant, Star Wars: The Force Awakens ($14.5 million) and Ride Along 2 ($12.9 million). Zac Efron and Robert De Niro’s R-rated comedy Dirty Grandpa fared the best with $11.5 million from 3,192 theaters. The movie, coming in No. 4, was decimated by critics but fared somewhat better with audiences, who gave it a B CinemaScore.

In the film, De Niro plays a grandfather who tricks his grandson (Efron) into driving him to Florida just days before the young, uptight lawyer’s wedding.

The Boy, fueled by younger females and Hispanics (41 percent), grossed $11.2 million from 2,671 theaters. Directed by William Brent Bell, the movie is the third release from STX Entertainment, who partnered with Lakeshore on the $10 million movie. Females made up 75 percent of ticket buyers.

The Hollywood Reporter: THR’s Photo Lounge at Sundance: Don Cheadle, Ellen Page, Nick Jonas and More Stars of Park City

Previously titled The Inhabitant, The Boy revolves around a young American (Lauren Cohan) who takes a job as a nanny in a remote English village. Her charge, however, turns out to be a life-size doll that the parents treat as a real boy, while the whereabouts of their son is unclear.

STX distribution executive Kevin Grayson said Sunday will be a key day if theaters start opening in New York City and the surrounding suburbs. “I think younger girls who have been cooped up at home will be eager to get out of the house,” he said.

Sony’s 5th Wave, starring Chloe Grace Moretz, came in No. 6 with an estimated $10.3 million from 2,908 locations. That’s a disappointing start, considering the $38 million movie was intended to launch a new YA film franchise. However, the film is faring better overseas, earning $16 million over the weekend from select markets for a foreign total of $27 million and global tally of roughly $38 million. In parts of Latin America, Europe and Eastern Europe, it’s outpacing fellow YA properties Maze Runner and the Divergent series.

5th Wave, based on the best-selling book series, follows a young girl on the run after four waves of increasingly deadly alien attacks leave much of Earth decimated. As she prepares for the fifth attack, she meets a young man (Nick Robinson). The film had to compete with The Boy for younger females; 62 percent of 5th Wave’s audience was under the age of 25, while 55 of the audience was female.

“Jonas was certainly not a friend of the movie business,” said Sony distribution chief Rory Bruer. “But it was a great weekend for us on the weekend stage. We are in great shape on this film.”

Both 5th Wave and The Boy earned a B- CinemaScore

The Hollywood Reporter: ‘The 5th Wave’: Film Review

In its sixth weekend, Star Wars: The Force Awakens hit $1.94 billion globally. It placed No. 2 in the U.S. with $14.3 million from 3,365 theaters for a domestic total of $879.3 million; overseas, it took in $23.3 million for a foreign tally of $1.06 billion.

Among holdovers, Universal’s Ride Along 2 appeared to be hit hardest by Jonas. The sequel, reuniting Ice Cube and Kevin Hart, tumbled 63 percent in its second weekend to $12.9 million from 3,192 theaters. The Revenant and Star Wars declined 50 percent and 46 percent, respectively. That’s the biggest dip for Revenant to date.

Read the original article at hollywoodreporter.com.