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'Tomorrowland' wins so-so holiday box office


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Houston, we have a problem.

Tomorrowland, Disney's high-flying, sci-fi adventure, launched at the box office with an underwhelming $41.7 million for the four-day Memorial Day weekend, according to studio estimates provided by Rentrak.

Based on the futuristic land at Disney theme parks, the PG-rated movie starring George Clooney and Britt Robertson flutters on the low end of all-time best Memorial Day openings — primarily dominated by sequels, according to Box Office Mojo. The highest-grossing remains Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, which sailed off with $139.8 million in 2007. (The biggest debut for an original movie for the four-day weekend was 2004's The Day After Tomorrow, with $85.8 million.)

Tomorrowland, an earnest family thriller directed by Brad Bird (The Incredibles) and co-written with Damon Lindelof (Lost), was met with mixed reactions across the board, earning only 50% positive reviews from critics and a slightly better 61% approval rating from audiences, according to survey site Rotten Tomatoes.

"As Memorial weekends go, this one wasn't a firecracker," says Rentrak analyst Paul Dergarabedian. Despite Tomorrowland's aggressive marketing campaign and Disney parks tie-in, "it just seems that audiences are very reluctant to try new things and stake their money on something that's somewhat unknown."

Still, the movie had been projected to earn $40 million to $50 million over the long weekend, Dergarabedian adds. Plus, sci-fi fare tends to do well internationally, and Tomorrowland has yet to open in major markets such as China and Japan. "People are quick to call a movie a 'bomb' just because it doesn't live up to expectations in North America," says BoxOffice.com analyst Phil Contrino. "Give it a little time to see how it does."

Meanwhile, Pitch Perfect 2 continues its aca-mazing box-office run. The sequel to the 2012 musical comedy sleeper sang its way to $38.5 million and No. 2 its second weekend, bringing its tally to $126 million. The directing debut of actress Elizabeth Banks (The Hunger Games franchise) has already outgrossed its predecessor's $65 million U.S. total, and all but guarantees a sequel, as newcomer Hailee Steinfeld looks to take the reins of the franchise from Anna Kendrick and Rebel Wilson.

The female-fueled smash earned 67% positive reviews from critics and 76% approval from audiences on Rotten Tomatoes.

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‘Pitch Perfect 2’ star a Rebel with a cause
Rebel Wilson, star of ‘Pitch Perfect 2,' tells Paste BN’s Andrea Mandell about the hard work that went into performing her own aerial stunts and working with director Elizabeth Banks. Video produced by Robert Hanashiro, Paste BN.
Robert Hanashiro, Paste BN

The weekend's only other new opener, horror remake Poltergeist, was a scream with the younger set, taking $26.5 million for fifth place — a healthy debut for the low-budget, PG-13 thriller. The critically adored Mad Max: Fury Road continued to blaze ahead with $32.1 million in third place, bringing the bombastic action movie's total to a solid $95.5 million in two weeks.

Despite Fury Road's No. 2 debut last week and reported $150 million budget, "it's a movie that people needed to see first before they realized how good it was and definitely not a cookie-cutter summer movie," Contrino says. "Now that people have seen it, it's hitting that 'must-see' status" and should play well until Jurassic World opens June 12.

Rounding out the top five, Disney/Marvel's Avengers: Age of Ultron sucker-punched an additional $27.8 million, landing in fourth and crossing the $400 million mark in the USA.

Overall, box office is down from last Memorial Day weekend, when X-Men: Days of Future Past started with $110.6 million (the fifth best ever for the four days), joined by other high-performing holdovers Godzilla and Neighbors.

Final numbers are expected Tuesday.