Sci-fi fantasy ‘Alita’ tops N. American box office
Rosa Salazar attends the premiere “Alita: Battle Angel” at Westwood Regency Theater on February 05, 2019 in Los Angeles (Frazer Harrison)
Los Angeles (AFP) – Fox’s new sci-fi fantasy “Alita: Battle Angel” dominated the North American box office charts over the four-day holiday weekend, earning $33.5 million, industry tracker Exhibitor Relations said on Tuesday.
The futuristic film, which stars Rosa Salazar voicing “Alita,” a cyborg almost more human than machine, is a computer-animated adaptation of a Japanese cyberpunk manga story.
Directed by Robert Rodriguez and produced by James Cameron, the project for the $170-million film was 20 years in the making.
The Fox film beat out last weekend’s leader, “The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part,” which earned Warner Bros an estimated $27.8 million over the Presidents Day weekend.
This fourth “Lego” movie again features the voices of Chris Pratt, Elizabeth Banks and Will Arnett — joined this time by Tiffany Haddish and Maya Rudolph — in a story of love and chaos in a post-apocalyptic toyland.
In third was another Warner Bros. film, “Isn’t It Romantic?”, at $16.6 million. Rebel Wilson stars as a rom-com hating New Yorker who, after a blow to the head, finds herself in her own romantic comedy. Liam Hemsworth also stars.
Fourth place went to Paramount’s “What Men Want.” The gender-switching remake of 2000’s “What Women Want” stars Taraji P. Henson. It had four-day ticket sales of $12.2 million.
And in fifth was “Happy Death Day 2U” from Universal, at $11 million — already recouping the mere $9 million it cost to make. Jessica Rothe again plays the role of a young woman living and reliving the day of her murder.
Rounding out the weekend’s top 10 were:
“Cold Pursuit” ($6.9 million)
“The Upside” ($6.5 million)
“Glass” ($4.6 million)
“The Prodigy” ($3.7 million)
“Green Book” ($3.5 million)
Disclaimer: This story is published from a syndicated feed. Siliconeer does not assume any liability for the above story. Validity of the above story is for 7 Days from original date of publishing. Content copyright AFP.