Can 'Dora the Explorer' Beat 'Hobbs & Shaw'?
by EG
Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham probably don't have much to fear from Dora the Explorer, but several new movie releases will give last week's top movie a lot of competition to contend with this weekend. Read on for details.
The dog days of August have arrived at the box office — literally.
Fox 2000 and Disney's The Art of Racing in the Rain, a drama about a canine voiced by Kevin Costner, is one of five new movies opening nationwide against Universal holdover Hobbs & Shaw.
A spinoff of the octane-loaded Fast & Furious franchise, Hobbs & Shaw should have no trouble staying atop the chart with $28 million or more after opening to $60 million last weekend in North America. (Holdovers The Lion King and Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood could also pose formidable competition.)
View this post on InstagramDora and her friends make a splash in this new clip from Dora and the Lost City of Gold, in theatres August 9! #DoraMovie
Among the new offerings, Racing in the Rain and Paramount's Dora and the Lost City of Gold, an adaptation of the beloved books and kids TV series, will vie for family love (both are rated PG). Dora is expected to earn $15 million to $19 million in its domestic launch; Racing in the Rain's bite is eyeing a more subdued $8 million-plus.
The other new entries are Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, a haunted thriller from CBS Films via Lionsgate that could entice teens and tweens; Warner Bros. and New Line's femme-fronted, star-packed mob pic The Kitchen; and Bleecker Street's sports drama Brian Banks, which hopes to lure the faith-based crowd along with families.
Scary Stories — adapted from the the best-selling children's horror book series — may be the only one of the five new titles that overperforms with a debut of $18 million to $20 million. It is rated PG-13.
Despite its high-profile cast, The Kitchen is looking to start off with a subdued $9 million or less after getting burned by critics (its current score on Rotten Tomatoes is a dismal 17 percent). The R-rated pic stars Melissa McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish and Elisabeth Moss as mob wives in late-1970s New York who take matters into their own hands after their husbands are jailed.
Get the rest of the story at The Hollywood Reporter.
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