After a dismal October for Hollywood, Disney and Marvel Studio's Thor: Rognarok proved a smashing success this weekend, pulling in US $121 million in North American theaters for a global total of $427 million, according to industry estimates.

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‘Thor,’ swinging his mighty hammer, smashes Hollywood’s slump

November 06, 2017 - 11:20

After a dismal October for Hollywood, Disney and Marvel Studio's Thor: Rognarok proved a smashing success this weekend, pulling in US $121 million in North American theaters for a global total of $427 million, according to industry estimates.

After a dismal October for Hollywood, Disney and Marvel Studio’s Thor: Rognarok proved a smashing success this weekend, pulling in US $121 million in North American theaters for a global total of $427 million. — AFP Photo
Viet Nam News

 LOS ANGELES — After a dismal October for Hollywood, Disney and Marvel Studio’s Thor: Rognarok proved a smashing success this weekend, pulling in US $121 million in North American theaters for a global total of $427 million, according to industry estimates.

How big was the film’s three-day opening? Well, the latest Thor episode, boosted by strong reviews and the self-mocking humor of Chris Hemsworth as the powerful Norse god (with Cate Blanchett as Hela, goddess of death), netted more than seven times the take of last week’s leader, Lionsgate’s Jigsaw.

That movie, which has police investigating a string of horrific murders carried out in the style of supposedly long-dead killer Jigsaw, dropped this weekend to third place at $6.7 million, according to website Exhibitor Relations.

In second was A Bad Mom’s Christmas, from STX Entertainment, at $17 million. That comedy stars three women — Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell and Kathryn Hahn — whose plans change when their mothers (Christine Baranski, Cheryl Hines and Susan Sarandon) drop in unexpectedly for the holidays.

In fourth position was Lionsgate’s Boo 2! A Madea Halloween at $4.7 million. The light comedy has actor/director Tyler Perry and buddies heading to a campground which — surprise! — turns out to be haunted.

In fifth spot was Geostorm from Warner Bros., at $3 million. The sci-fi disaster thriller follows Gerard Butler as he struggles to save the world from an apocalyptic storm caused by climate-controlling satellites run amok.

Rounding out the top 10 were:

Happy Death Day ($2.8 million)

Thank You for Your Service ($2.3 million)

Blade Runner: 2049 ($2.2 million)

Let There Be Light ($2.2 million)

Only the Brave ($1.9 million). — AFP 

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