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Ride Along rolls over Jack Ryan to win US weekend box office

Published: 21 Jan 2014 - 11:06 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 06:39 pm

By Ronald Grover and Chris Michaud
Ride Along, a buddy cop comedy starring Kevin Hart and Ice Cube, collected $41.2m in ticket sales to win the weekend box office race, leaving another new release, political thriller Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, in the dust.
Last week’s box office winner, the Afghanistan war tale Lone Survivor, was second with ticket sales of $23.2m, according to studio estimates provided by tracking firm Rentrak.
In a weekend crowded with four new films, The Nut Job, the first animated release from Open Road Films, collected $20.6m in ticket sales to claim third place.
Starring Chris Pine as the late author Tom Clancy’s fictional CIA analyst, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit took in $17.2m over the first three days of the Martin Luther King holiday weekend for the No. 4 spot.
Ride Along, which hip hop singer and star Ice Cube also produced, far surpassed Hollywood’s $28m opening weekend forecast and was the biggest three-day King Day holiday weekend opening ever. While only 10 of 47 reviews were favourable, according to the site Rotten Tomatoes, 94 percent of the audience surveyed on the site wanted to see it.
“The timing was really right on this one,” said Nikki Rocco, president for domestic distribution at Universal Pictures which released the film, which cost about $25m.
Noting that there had not really been another comedy since Anchorman 2, which opened a month ago, Rocco said the audience skewed surprisingly female - 57 percent - and that Ride Along had even turned into a bit of a date movie.
Audiences graded it an A, according to CinemaScore which polls people who have seen films, boding well for the coming weeks, Rocco added.
The Nut Job, the first animated film from Open Road Films, a joint between theater giants AMC Entertainment and Regal Entertainment Group, benefited from playing in more than 3,400 theatres, according to the site Box Office Mojo, about the same as Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit but far more than Ride Along, which played in around 2,700.
Weekend sales for The Nut Job ranked as the biggest opening for an animated film not produced by a major studio, beating out the $16.8m for 2009 film Coraline. Nut Job cost about $30m to make after tax rebates.
Pine, best known for his role as Captain Kirk in the 2009 film Star Trek, is the fourth actor to play Jack Ryan in the fifth film based on the late Clancy’s character. Alec Baldwin, Harrison Ford and Ben Affleck have all played the part.
The film, a reboot of the movie series featuring a younger Pine, took more than five years to make it to the screen.
Paramount, the studio behind it, put it on hold when Pine was cast its Star Trek film, and said on Sunday that the opening box office was in line with expectations.
Rounding out the top five, Disney’s animated hit Frozen took in just under $12m.
Academy Award nominee American Hustle was sixth with $10.6m in ticket sales. Two other top-nominated films, Gravity and 12 Years a Slave, returned to theatres after having largely ended their runs.
The low-budget horror film Devil’s Due opened with $8.5m in sales for the No. 7 slot.
Meanwhile eighth place went to August: Osage County, about a family that is convened amid crisis and the dysfunctional matriarch, played by Meryl Streep, who unites them. The film, also starring Julia Roberts, brought in $9m.
Falling from fourth to ninth with $8.9m in earnings was Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street, based on the rise and fall of disgraced financier Jordan Belfort, played by Leonardo DiCaprio.
And rounding out the top 10 with nearly $5.1m was Saving Mr. Banks, a drama about Walt Disney’s quest to make a film adaptation of Mary Poppins.
Viacom’s Paramount Pictures released Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit and The Wolf of Wall Street. The Ride Along and Lone Survivor were distributed by Comcast’s Universal Pictures. Fox, a unit of Twenty-First Century Fox, released Devil’s Due. Open Road Films, a joint between theatre giants AMC Entertainment and Regal Entertainment Group, released The Nut Job. Frozen and Saving Mr. Banks were released by Walt Disney Co. American Hustle was distributed by Sony. August: Osage County was released by The Weinstein Company.
Agencies