‘Captain America’ Blows Up Weekend Box Office With Boffo $203 Mil Globally, Scores Record $96 Mil Stateside
The Marvel machine continues to be a wonder at the box office, with “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” amassing a whammo $203.3 million worldwide this weekend, of which an estimated $96.2 million came from Stateside plexes, making it the largest domestic debut ever in April.
To date, “Winter Soldier” has raked in
an overwhelming $300 million-plus global tally, with several overseas
territories bowing the pic last weekend. The film now is playing in
approximately 92% of the international marketplace.
In China, “Winter Soldier” scored the
largest opening for a Disney-Marvel film with $39.2 million, which is 16%
larger than “Iron Man 3.” Russia and Australia also each contributed No. 1 bows
locally, grossing $7.4 million and $6 million, respectively.

“Records aside, this is a testament to
the momentum created within the Marvel universe for each of these characters to
become something greater than themselves,” said Disney distribution topper Dave
Hollis, adding that the film is well positioned during spring break to take
advantage of an already strong word-of-mouth play.
“When you have the critical and fan
response, it feels like we’re set up for an extraordinary run ahead,” Hollis
said.
That said, “Captain America” was unable
to save 3D, which contributed just 23% domestically this weekend (outside Imax
and PLF screens).
In non-”Cap” B.O. news, Paramount’s
“Noah” dropped to second place, with $17 million, down roughly 60%, a much
steeper drop than desired for the costly tentpole. Still, the Biblical epic has
cumed $72.3 million domestically in two weeks, with a solid global gross of
$178.5 million.
At the specialty box office, Fox
Searchlight’s V.I.P. “The Grand Budapest Hotel” continues to cross over
reaching $33.2 million in its fifth frame. The film again landed in the top 10
with an estimated weekend gross of $6.3 million from 1,263 locations, the
second-widest expansion for a Wes Anderson film.
Meanwhile, Lionsgate-Codeblack
Entertainment’s Halle Berry psychological drama “Frankie & Alice” scored an
underwhelming $2,047 per screen average from 171 locations after languishing on
the shelf for more than a year. The film estimated a total $350,000 in three
days.
By Andrew Stewart
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