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Home » Sony Pictures Dominates Weekend Box Office As Warner’s ‘The Flash’ Nose Dives

Sony Pictures Dominates Weekend Box Office As Warner’s ‘The Flash’ Nose Dives

Jennifer Lawrence in No Hard Feelings

Erik Gruenwedel

Sony Pictures is on track for a resurgence at the weekend box office, thanks to the promising debut of Jennifer Lawrence adult comedy No Hard Feelings and the animated return of Spider-Man.

Spider-Man: Across the Universe returned atop North American theatrical ticket sales, after the Columbia Pictures and Sony Pictures Animation sequel made $5.7 million on Friday, $7.475 million on Saturday and is projected to add $6.125 million on Sunday across 3,785 screens, including Imax and PLF screens. Sony is projecting $19.3 million for the weekend, bringing its total domestic gross after four weekends to $317 million through Sunday; $561 million worldwide.

The animated follow-up to 2019’s Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, held off Disney/Pixar Animation’s Elemental with $18.3 million in revenue. In the No. 3 spot, and barely besting No Hard Feelings was Warner Bros. Pictures’ The Flash, with last weekend’s No. 1 experiencing a 73% freefall in ticket sales to $15.3 million. That’s a bigger percentage drop-off in sophomore ticket sales than the 59% decline for DC Universe’s Black Adam and Shazam! Fury of the Gods at 69%.

Columbia Pictures’ R-rated Hard Feelings made $6.25 million on Friday, $4.875 million on Saturday and is projected to add $3.975 million on Sunday across 3,208 screens. The studio is projecting an opening weekend total of $15.1 million. The film currently holds an 88% Rotten Tomatoes audience score and received a 4-star PostTrak rating.

Paramount Pictures’ Transformers: Rise of the Beasts saw another $11.6 million in ticket sales in its third weekend, to up its North American tally to $123 million; $314 million globally.  Finally, director Wes Anderson’s latest cult movie, Asteroid City, generated $9 million in projected ticket sales in its debut across 1,675 screens. That’s the highest box office debut ever for an Anderson movie.

The comedy-drama about global events interrupting a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention in an American desert town in 1955, features a stellar cast, including Tom Hanks, Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Ed Norton, and Bryan Cranston, among others.

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