The animated sequel -- "The
Lego Movie 2: The Second Part" -- took in $34.7 million, one of the lowest
openings in the series. It nonetheless beat out two other new releases,
"What Men Want," and "Cold Pursuit," industry tracker Exhibitor
Relations said on Monday.The "Lego" film cost $100 million and had
been expected to fetch at least $50 million on its opening weekend.”.
The latest Warner Bros
"Lego" movie topped the North American box office charts on its debut
weekend -- but performed well below estimates from the studio and independent
industry predictions.
The new
edition again features the voices of Chris Pratt, Elizabeth Banks and Will
Arnett -- joined this time by Tiffany Haddish and Maya Rudolph -- in a story
about love, chaos and revenge in a grim, post-apocalyptic toyland.In second
place was Paramount comedy "What Men Want," at $18.2 million. The
film, a gender-switching remake of 2000's "What Women Want," stars
Taraji P. Henson.Third spot went to thriller "Cold Pursuit" at $11 million.
The film's opening was overshadowed by controversy over racially fraught
comments by lead actor Liam Neeson, and Lionsgate canceled a red-carpet
premiere, but Variety said the opening tracked with expectations.
"The
Upside" from STX Films earned $7.1 million in its fifth week out. The film
stars Bryan Cranston as a wealthy quadriplegic who hires ex-convict Kevin Hart
as his caretaker.In fifth place was last week's leading film, "Glass"
from Universal, at $6.3 million. The M. Night Shyamalan thriller, mostly set in
a psychiatric ward, stars Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson and James McAvoy.
Rounding
out the weekend's top 10 were:
"The
Prodigy" ($5.9 million)
"Green
Book" ($3.4 million)
"Aquaman"
($3.2 million)
"Spider-Man:
Into the Spider-Verse" ($3 million)
"Miss
Bala" ($2.7 million)
'Lego' sequel falls at US box office
Reviewed by SenseTechGroup
on
February 13, 2019
Rating:

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