Can 'Wrinkle in Time' Beat 'Black Panther'?
by EG
Black Panther is set to have another great weekend, and the film's likely to fend off the new competition in yet another box-office battle. The main competition this week comes from a fellow Disney movie, the long-awaited adaptation of the classic fantasy novel A Wrinkle in Time. Wrinkle should be a worthy challenger, but Black Panther still has the advantage.
It remains to be seen whether A Wrinkle in Time — based on Madeleine L'Engle's beloved book — can beat Black Panther at the North American box office this weekend in what's shaping up to be a Disney versus Disney showdown.
Ava DuVernay directed Wrinkle in Time, becoming the first African-American woman to helm a $100 million Hollywood event film. Tracking suggests the family friendly movie, which hopes to appeal in particular to tweens and teenagers, will open in the $35 million-$40 million range, a relatively muted start for a marquee Disney title.
Not even powerhouse Disney is impervious to the challenges facing fantasy-adventures at the box office. In 2016, Steven Spielberg's The BFG opened to a mere $22.7 million over the long July 4th weekend, while Brad Bird's Tomorrowland was a major dud in 2015. (A major issue for Tomorrowland was its $200 million budget; Wrinkle in Time cost Disney half as much to produce.)
Outside of Disney movies, other fantasy-adventures targeting younger audiences that have faced trouble include Martin Scorsese's Hugo (2011) and Golden Compass (2011).
Black Panther could take in north of $40 million domestically in its fourth weekend as it prepares to bound past the $1 billion globally. Through Wednesday, Black Panther's worldwide gross stood at $921.3 million, including $512.6 million in North America and $408.7 million overseas. The movie opens in its final foreign market, China, on Friday.
No one at Disney, or in Hollywood, could have predicted that Ryan Coogler's Black Panther would continue to be such a force in its fourth weekend, or pose such tough competition for Winkle in Time.
DuVernay and Disney have been lauded for the film's diverse cast, which stars Storm Reid as the story's 13-year-old heroine alongside Oprah Winfrey, Levi Miller, Reese Wtherspoon, Mindy Kaling, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Chris Pine.
Get the rest of the story at The Hollywood Reporter.
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