The superhero film made history at the Presidents Day box office
after continually beating expectations; globally, it has earned $426.6
million.
In a defining moment for diversity and Hollywood, Disney’s and Marvel Studios’ Black Panther debuted to a record-shattering $242 million at the Presidents Day box office, according to updated estimates.
The bold superhero film passed up Star Wars: The Last Jedi ($241.6 million) to earn more in its first four days than any movie in history at the North American box office, save for Star Wars: The Force Awakens ($288.1 million), not adjusted for inflation. Black Panther also scored the biggest Monday in history with $40.2 million, besting Force Awakens‘ $40.1 million.
Black Panther‘s three-day haul of $201.8 million is the
fifth- biggest domestic opening of all time, and the second-biggest for a
superhero title behind fellow Marvel pic The Avengers ($207.4 million).
Throughout Presidents Day weekend, estimates for the film were continually revised upward.
Directed by Ryan Coogler, Black Panther is the first big-budget studio tentpole to feature virtually an all-black cast.
In the $200 million film, Chadwick Boseman stars as T’Challa/Black
Panther alongside Lupita Nyong’o, Michael B. Jordan, Daniel Kaluuya,
Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, Angela Bassett, Forest Whitaker and Andy
Serkis. The story, described as a tale of black power and black pride in
addition to its superhero themes, follows T’Challa as he is sworn in as
king of Wakanda, a cloaked, technologically advanced nation in Africa
that is home to the exotic metal vibranium, the source of Black
Panther’s powers.
Black Panther was fueled by a diverse audience. According to
comScore, 37 percent of ticket buyers were African American. Caucasians
made up the next largest group (35 percent), followed by Hispanics (18
percent). That sort of demographic breakdown is unheard of for an
all-audience event film. On average, African Americans make up about 15
percent of the audience for superhero fare.
Females also turned out in force to see Black Panther,
heralded for its portrayal of strong women, making up 45 percent of all
ticket buyers (that share is usually 35 to 40 percent on a superhero
movie’s opening weekend).
Other records broken include those of the biggest opening for an
African-American director, the top-scoring superhero film on Rotten
Tomatoes (97 percent) and the biggest February bow, supplanting previous
champ Deadpool, which took in $152.2 million over the four-day Presidents’ Day weekend in 2016.
Audiences bestowed Black Panther with an A+ CinemaScore (the only other Marvel title to earn the mark was Avengers).
Black Panther, which cost $200 million to make before
marketing, also had a major push overseas, launching to $184.6 million
through Monday for a global debut of $426.6 million. It opened in every
major market save for Russia (Feb. 22), Japan (March 1) and China (March
9).
While Black Panther isn’t the sensation internationally that
it is in the U.S., it came in ahead of expectations for an American
film with a black cast.
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