‘The Flash’ Targets $70 Million, Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ Aims for $35 Million in Underwhelming Box Office Battle

News   2024-12-19 22:53:53

It was positioned as the first big blockbuster battle of summer. But this weekends showdown between The Flash and Pixars Elemental isnt shaping up to be one for box office record books.

Both of the mega-budgeted tentpoles are tracking for lackluster starts, with The Flash, starring Ezra Miller as the title DC superhero, targeting $70 million and Elemental, an animated adventure about opposites who attract, aiming to collect just $35 million. Insiders and analysts are split on the final weekend number for The Flash, with some expecting an even softer $68 million and others projecting as much as $85 million.

The Flash is landing on the big screen without a traditional promotional push from Miller, who has been a controversial figure in the lead-up to the films release. The actor, who was arrested several times in the past few years, released a statement in August to apologize for their erratic behavior and say they were in treatment for complex mental health issues. Miller attended the premiere of The Flash on Monday, marking their first public appearance in two years, but stopped short of engaging with the press.

Chalk it up to the unconventional global campaign or a glut of superhero offerings. But a debut of $70 million or below is less than heroic for a comic book epic that cost more than $200 million and has been heralded (if mostly by the executives who made the film) as one of the greatest superhero movies ever made. And yet, its on pace with the Dwayne Johnson-led Black Adam, which opened last year to $67 million and did not receive anywhere near the same critical sentiment. Plagued by negative reviews, the $200 million-budgeted Black Adam tapped out with $168 million domestically and failed to reach $400 million globally, ultimately losing money in its theatrical run. The Flash is hoping to fall closer in line with 2019s Aquaman, which also kicked off to $67 million, but showed some impressive endurance, ultimately grossing $335 million in North America and $1.14 billion globally.

Analysts point out The Flash isnt necessarily destined for the same fate as Black Adam as long as audiences agree with new DC chief James Gunn and Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslavs lavish praise about the greatness of The Flash. Critics have mostly liked the film, in which Miller plays the Scarlet Speedster known as Barry Allen across multiple timelines and Michael Keaton and Ben Affleck reprise their roles as Batman. It filmmaker Andy Muschietti directed The Flash, which begins as Barry travels back in time to prevent his mothers murder and inadvertently cracks open the DC multiverse. Cameos abound!

Warner Bros. could use a comic book hit. The Flash is the second of three DC films that will open in theaters in 2023 before the studios new overlords Gunn and Peter Safran take the comic book universe in an entirely new direction. It follows Shazam: Fury of the Gods, which opened in March and turned into one of the biggest superhero misfires in recent memory with $57 million at the end of its domestic run. Blue Beetle, starring Xolo Mariduea as the alien symbiote, opens on Aug. 18.

In regards to Elemental, the family friendly film is bracing for disaster. Those projected ticket sales are rivaling 2015s The Good Dinosaur ($39 million) and 2020s Onward ($39 million) as the worst starts in Pixars modern history. The animation empire has been struggling since the pandemic, when several of its titles were sent directly to Disney+ and possibly trained family audiences to watch its movies at home. The studio took Elemental to the Cannes Film Festival to amplify the point (to all the youngsters sunning themselves on the French Riviera?) that Pixar is again making movies for the big screen.

Directed by Peter Sohn, Elemental is set in a world inhabited by anthropomorphic elements of nature who dont always blend well together. The story revolves around the friendship between fire element Ember and water element Wade, who discover they actually have more in common than meets the eye.

Also this weekend, Lionsgates horror satire The Blackening is expected to earn $7.5 million in its debut. Directed by Tim Story, the film pokes fun at the common horror trope that Black characters are often the first to die and follows a group of Black friends who gather at a remote cabin to celebrate Juneteenth. Cue the masked killer

In limited release, Wes Andersons Asteroid City is opening in six theaters across New York City and Los Angeles. The 1950s-set film takes place in a fictional desert town as a cosmic event disrupts the annual Junior Stargazer convention and stars Scarlett Johansson, Jason Schwartzman, Maya Hawke, Bryan Cranston and dozens of other Anderson regulars.

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