There’s still a big audience for a good Western, if the opening weekend forThe Magnificent Sevenis to be believed.
Antoine Fuqua’s remake of John Sturges’ 1960 ensemble classic, which itself was a Western take on Akira Kurosawa’s 1954 filmSeven Samurai,wrangled a tidy $35 million premiere to go along with the film’s good (but not great) reviews and an extremely positive assessment from audiences. While that was slightly less than what many pundits predicted for a film that brought Denzel Washington and Chris Pratt together on the same screen, it was good enough to putThe Magnificent Sevennear the top of the all-time best opening weekends for Westerns.
In the current rankings of best opening weekends forfilms in the Western genre, only the 2011 animated featureRangoand the 2011 live-action filmCowboys & Aliens(a hybrid of Western and sci-fi based on a comic book) rank aboveThe Magnificent Seven. Fuqua’s film actually managed to surpass the premieres of bothDjango UnchainedandThe Lone Ranger— two films more clearly associated with the genre — to claim third place on the list.
As far as all-time earnings go, the current record-holder in the genre is 1990’sDances With Wolves, which earned $184.2 million in U.S. theaters (the only market that typically matters when it comes to this genre) over the course of its 31-week run in theaters. Following close behind it is last year’sThe Revenant, with $183.6 million domestically.
Coming in afterThe Magnificent Sevenon the weekend’s top 10 list was the animated featureStorks, which earned a respectable $21.8 million, but fell quite a bit short of expectations for a family-friendly animated movie that isn’t facing too much competition for audiences right now.
The rest of the weekend’s top 10 films were all returning movies continuing their respective runs. Among them,Suicide SquadandDon’t Breathecontinued to stay strong in theaters, dropping relatively little from week to week. In contrast, the horror sequelBlair Witchtook a big hit in its second week in theaters, dropping almost 60 percent in ticket sales from last week’s premiere.
Next week’s new releases include the real-world disaster dramaDeepwater Horizon, Tim Burton’s adaptation of the quirky (itisTim Burton, after all)Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, and the ensemble heist comedyMasterminds. It’s difficult to predict which film audiences are going to go for, as there isn’t an obvious favorite among them.