Written by Kirk Baird
Is there any stopping The
Avengers? Earth’s Mightiest Heroes joined forces onscreen and set
box-office records, including the honour to be first film to debut with a
$200-million-plus opening weekend. (Its $207.4 million haul bested previous
record holder Harry Potter and theDeathly Hallows: Part 2 and its $169.2 million in 2011.).
This weekend marked its third-straight at the top of the box
office, as it continues to fend off some big-budgeted competition including Dark Shadows and most recently Battleship.
The Avengers’ reign
as moviegoers’ top pick will come to an end at some point, perhaps as soon as
this weekend with the next challenger, Men
in Back III. The sci-fi comedy reunites Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones as
Agent J and Agent K, respectively. The story features Agent J time traveling to
the 1960s to prevent the assassination of a younger Agent K (played by Josh
Brolin) and changing history.
And speaking of time travel … it’s been a decade since Men in Black Part II underwhelmed
critics, audiences, and the box office, though it did ultimately earn Sony
studios a profit. Part II opened in July 2002 with a $52 million haul. Not bad
until you consider the first Men in Black
opened with nearly the same amount, in 500 less theaters, and at 1997 ticket prices.
For the record: The Avengers made $55
million in its third weekend, which makes it formidable competition this
weekend as well.
If Men in Black III
fails to take down the team of Marvel superheroes, next up to dethrone the king
would be Snow White and the Huntsman,
starring Charlize Theron, Chris Hemsworth (who plays Thor the God of Thunder in
The Avengers), and Kristen Stewart.
The trailers look promising for this dark and CGI-intense adaptation of the
classic fairytale. It’s also the second Snow White big-screen reinvention this
year, following on the heels of Mirror
Mirror, a dark comedy starring Julia Roberts, Nathan Lane, Armie Hammer,
and Lily Collins (daughter of singer-songwriter-drummer Phil Collins). Mirror Mirror opened March 30 and grossed
only $18.13 million its first weekend, on its way to less than $70 million.
With an estimated budget of $85 million, Mirror
Mirror only made a profit through the foreign box-office and yielded nearly
$98 million.
But any victory by either of these two summer film newcomers
would be short lived, given the increasing build-up to the June 8 opening of Prometheus.
What do you think?
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