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Stephen King's 'It' scores record opening with $123.4 million

Stephen King's 'It' scores record opening with $123.4 million

The new freaky-scary film broke records over the weekend as the largest Sept opening in North American theaters
12 Sep, 2017

Stephen King wrote "It." Warner Bros. and New Line made "It." And audiences seem to love "It."

The new freaky-scary film by that title broke records over the weekend as the largest September opening and largest opening for an R-rated horror film in North American theaters, industry data showed on Monday.

It, starring Bill Skarsgard as a creepy clown who terrorises children in a sleepy Maine town, pulled in $123.4 million, industry monitor Exhibitor Relations reported.

The movie, from Argentine director Andy Muschietti, comes amid one of the slowest cinematic summers in years -- and likely would have done better but for the impact of Hurricane Irma on Florida moviegoers.

Coming in second -- but left far back in the dust -- was another new release, Home Again from Open Road Films, with a take of just $8.6 million. The romantic comedy has Reese Witherspoon unexpectedly finding herself living with three young men after a separation from her husband.

In third was a movie that had clung to a box office lead for three straight weeks, The Hitman's Bodyguard from Lionsgate, which netted $4.8 million.

The action comedy stars Ryan Reynolds as a bodyguard hired to protect a notorious hitman played by Samuel L. Jackson.

Next was another Warner Bros. horror film, Annabelle: Creation, which took $4 million. It is part of the popular Conjuring series of movies.

And in fifth was Wind River from the Weinstein Co., at $3.1 million. It stars Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen as federal agents trying to solve a murder on an Indian reservation.

Rounding out the top 10 were: Leap! ($2.4 million), Spider-Man: Homecoming ($2 million), Dunkirk ($1.9 million), Logan Lucky ($1.7 million), The Emoji Movie ($1.1 million).

Comments

derangedman Sep 12, 2017 03:59pm
Didn't IT die? haha
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JA-Australia Sep 12, 2017 05:29pm
I found IT to be one of the most boring horror films filled with tired cliches and constant disappointments. I am still not sure if it was meant to be a tongue-in-cheek parody or a real horror film. The only scary scene is near the beginning and it's all downhill from there. It was so slow paced and boring that, if I had been alone, I might have walked out half an hour into the movie. It is basically a bad version of 'Jeepers Creepers'. A really bad version.
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