DStv Channel 403 Monday, 23 September 2024

All spooked up: Horror film leads 'Priscilla' at box office

LOS ANGELES - Universal's Halloween season release "Five Nights at Freddy's" remained in first place at the North American box office, beating out the awards-tilted biopic on Elvis Presley's wife "Priscilla," estimates showed Sunday.

Despite maintaining its lead in ticket sales, "Freddy's" still had a frightening drop from $78-million in its debut weekend to only $19.4-million this week, according to industry watcher Exhibitor Relations.

The video-game based film, released both in theaters and on Universal's Peacock platform, is "crashing in its second weekend of simultaneous streaming," said analyst David A. Gross.

Josh Hutcherson, starring in his biggest role since the "Hunger Games" franchise, leads the cast as a security guard working nights at an abandoned family entertainment center, where creepy animatronic characters spring murderously to life after dark.

The horror film was followed again by "Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour," earning another $13.5-million in its fourth week out, for a total domestic haul of $166-million.

Martin Scorsese's "Killers of the Flower Moon" maintained its third-place spot at $7-million in North American theaters, while also crossing the symbolic $100-million figure in worldwide sales.

In its first wide-release weekend, Sofia Coppola's "Priscilla" landed in fourth place at just $5-million.

The film charts the rocky relationship between Elvis and Priscilla Presley, from their first meeting on a German army base when she was just 14 and the rock'n'roll star was 24, through to their acrimonious split.

IThe latest Elvis-related biopic to hit theaters had a "fair opening for a romance drama," said analyst David A. Gross.

It may find some more momentum, he said, given its "excellent reviews and very good audience scores."

In fifth was newly released Spanish-language film "Radical" at $2.7-million. Based on a true story, it follows a teacher in a Mexican border town who "tries a radical new method to unleash the curiosity and potential of his students," according to production company Pantelion Films.

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