The Invisible Man tops box office with 29 million dollars

The Invisible Man carried a relatively modest budget, costing under 10 million dollars to produce, and exceeded expectations by a few million dollars. The film, which had been well-received by critics, drew diverse audiences to the theaters (46% Caucasian, 20% African American and 18% Hispanic), according to exit polls.

By: AP | Los Angeles | Published: March 2, 2020 5:29:20 pm
The Invisible Man box office The Invisible Man rode a wave of good reviews to a very visible spot atop the box office this weekend. (Universal Pictures via AP)

The Elisabeth Moss-led thriller The Invisible Man rode a wave of good reviews to a very visible spot atop the box office this weekend. Universal Pictures on Sunday estimated that the film from writer-director Leigh Whannell earned 29 million dollars from North American theaters. Internationally, the Blumhouse production picked up an additional 20.2 million dollars.

Whannell helped dust off the classic HG Wells story and update it for modern audiences by focusing on Moss’ victim character instead of the Invisible Man character, who here is an abusive ex-boyfriend.

The Invisible Man carried a relatively modest budget, costing under 10 million dollars to produce, and exceeded expectations by a few million dollars. The film, which had been well-received by critics, drew diverse audiences to the theaters (46% Caucasian, 20% African American and 18% Hispanic), according to exit polls.

“We couldn’t be more pleased,” said Jim Orr, Universal’s president of domestic distribution. “(Whannell) brought this century-old character to life in a very clever and relevant way.”

The studio expects it to continue to play well into March, although it will have some extra competition when A Quiet Place Part II opens on March 20.

Paramount Pictures’ Sonic the Hedgehog slid to second place in its third weekend in theaters adding 16 million dollars and bringing its domestic total to 128.3 million dollars. The Call of the Wild, with Harrison Ford, placed third in its second weekend with 13.2 million dollars.

Fourth place went to the anime superhero film My Hero Academia: Heroes Rising which opened to 6.3 dollars million from just 1,260 screens.

“We should never underestimate films like this that may not have broad recognition among the general public,” said Comscore’s senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

Bad Boys for Life rounded out the top five with 4.3 million dollars in its seventh weekend. The Will Smith and Martin Lawrence pic is just shy of reaching the 200 million dollars mark in North America and has earned over 400 million dollars globally.

In limited release, Wendy, Benh Zeitlin’s long-awaited follow-up to his Oscar-nominated film Beasts of the Southern Wild, got off to a bumpy start with just 30,000 dollars from four theaters. The Peter Pan-inspired film has garnered mixed reviews from critics and will be expanding in the coming weeks.

Although it’s still early in the year, overall the box office is up nearly 3.5%.

“This weekend it was business as usual in North American theaters,” Dergarabedian said. “People went to the movies to escape the trials and tribulations of the real world.”

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.