‘Mickey 17’ dethrones ‘Bridget Jones 4’ to top UK-Ireland box office | News

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‘Mickey 17’ dethrones ‘Bridget Jones 4’ to top UK-Ireland box office | News

UK-Ireland top five Mar 7-9  Rank Film (origin)Distributor Mar 7-9 gross  Total Week 1 Mickey 17  (US)   Warner Bros  £2.13m  £2.1m

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UK-Ireland top five Mar 7-9
 Rank  Film (origin) Distributor  Mar 7-9 gross   Total  Week
1 Mickey 17  (US)   Warner Bros  £2.13m  £2.1m 1
Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy  (UK-Fr-US)  Universal  £2.05m  £40.4m
Marching Powder  (UK)  True Brit  £1.1m  £1.1m 1
Captain America: Brave New World  (US)  Disney  £614,000  £16.8m 4
Dog Man  (US)  Universal  £373,654  £12.5m  5

GBP to USD conversion rate: 1.29

Fantasy adventure Mickey 17 topped the UK-Ireland box office on its opening weekend, ending the three-week run atop the chart of Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy.

Mickey 17 opened to £2.1m for Warner Bros, from 668 sites at a £3,182 location average. That is the biggest opening for a Bong Joon Ho film in the territory, topping the £1.1m start of Parasite from February 2020. It provided Warner Bros with its biggest opening weekend since Joker: Folie A Deux took £5.7m in October 2024.

Mad About The Boy posted a 50% drop on its fourth weekend, adding almost £2.1m. The Universal romantic comedy has passed the £40m mark with £40.4m to date, and should overtake the £42.1m of 2001’s Bridget Jones’s Diary  within the next week. It also stands a good chance of catching the £48.3m of 2016’s Bridget Jones’s Baby before the end of its run.

UK comedy-drama Marching Powder started with a powerful £1.1m weekend for True Brit Entertainment. Playing on 429 screens, Nick Love’s film took a £2,508 screen average – a powerful figure for an 18-rated film. True Brit is projecting the film will top its £1.6m budget by the end of its first week. “Spending significantly less than the studios on advertising, we focused on a bold and highly personalised social media campaign in place of TV ads,” said True Brit Entertainment CEO Zygi Kamasa.

Disney’s Captain America: Brave New World  dropped 57.7% on its fourth weekend, with £614,000, and is up to £16.8m total.

Animation Dog Man added £373,654 on its fifth weekend for Universal after a 45% drop, and is up to £12.5m total.

Despite two powerful up-to-date films, takings for the top five dropped 12.7% compared to last weekend to £6.2m, and are down 29.7% on the equivalent weekend from last year. After overall box office takings increased year-on-year in February for a fourth consecutive month, March will need some powerful performances in its second half to continue that run.

Anora  resurgence

Black Bear horror The Monkey added £234,000 on its third weekend – a 61% drop that takes it to £2.7m total.

Sony comedy One Of Them Days starring Keke Palmer and SZA opened to £193,758 from 365 venues, at a £531 site average. Including previews, the film has £203,136.

After winning five Oscars including best picture the previous weekend, Sean Baker’s Anora experienced a 451% surge at the box office. The film took £179,059 on its 19th weekend in cinemas, and is up to £2.6m for Universal. For comparison, previous box office takings following a best picture win include £90,354 for Oppenheimer  in 2024 (up 487% on its 35th weekend in cinemas), £166,259 for Everything Everywhere All At Once and £2.5m for Parasite, up 133% on its second weekend.

Disney’s Mufasa: The Lion King put on £147,000 on its 12 weekend in cinemas – a 45.7% drop that brings it to £32.9m, ahead of Shrek Forever After  (£32.7m) and just behind Sing 2  (£33m).

Conclave continues to play well through a 15th weekend in cinemas for Black Bear, adding £124,000 on its latest session – a 37% drop that brings it to £9.2m as the distributor’s highest-grossing release ever.

The Last Showgirl

Gia Coppola’s The Last Showgirl has entered distributor Picturehouse Entertainment’s top five titles of all time on just its second weekend. The dancer drama added £120,000 – a 58.8% drop that brought it to £735,000, behind only God’s Own Country  (£879,328), The Party (£1.1m) and The Wife (£1.7m) from Picturehouse.

Sonic The Hedgehog 3 leads Paramount’s slate, adding £81,000 on its 11th weekend – a 46.7% drop that brings it to £26.2m.

A Complete Unknown starring Timothee Chalamet added £78,000 on its eighth weekend for Disney – a 59.4% drop that brings it to a powerful £12.1m, ahead of music biopics including 2022’s Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance With Somebody (£11.7m).

Documentary Twiggy about the British model (real name: Lesley Lawson) opened to £63,164 from 256 locations, at a £247 location average for Studio Soho Distribution.

Disney animation Moana 2 added £59,000 on its 15th session – a 28.3% drop that brings it to £42.4m.

Now in cinemas through a fifth weekend for Trafalgar Releasing, event cinema title Macbeth: David Tennant and Cush Jumbo increased its takings by 82.7% compared to last time out. The filmed play added £51,660 to hit a robust £2.2m.

Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist added £45,948 on its seventh weekend in cinemas – a 69% drop that brought it to £3.7m total for Universal.

Fresh from winning best supporting actor at the Oscars for Kieran Culkin, A Real Pain put on £32,000 on its ninth session for Disney, with a decent £3.5m total. 

A fourth weekend for Bollywood historical drama Chhaava brought in £24,340, for a £807,205 total to date for Yash Raj Films.

Still in cinemas after 16 weekends, Wicked added £23,903 on its latest session to cross the £61m mark for Universal.

Theatre release The Importance Of Being Earnest added £23,248 on a third weekend for National Theatre Live, and has £1.4m in total.

Laura Carreria’s debut feature On Falling opened to £19,970 from 53 sites at a £377 site average, with 11 of those sites screening Friday/Saturday only for special International Women’s Day screenings. The Conic release has £29,603 including previews.

Becoming Led Zeppelin added a further £18,240 on its fifth weekend for Sony. It has £995,995 in total, and will pass the £1m mark this weekend in a powerful result for a documentary.

European animation Giants Of La Mancha opened to £17,230 from 184 screens for Miracle/Dazzler, at a £94 screen average. 

Studiocanal’s Paddington In Peru is still in cinemas after 18 weekends, with £16,548 on its latest session bringing it to £36.7m total – finishing not far behind the £38m of 2014’s Paddington.

Jesus Christ Superstar: Live Arena Tour added £14,963 on its second weekend for CinemaLive, and is up to £388,961. 

Sony anime Attack On Titan: The Last Attack added a further £11,243 on its second weekend, and is at a £377,414 cume.

Horror comedy Heart Eyes added £11,000 on its fourth weekend, and is up to £1.3m for Paramount.

Tim Fehlbaum’s news drama September 5 added £8,000 on its fifth session, and is up to £1.5m for Paramount.

Warner Bros event title Purple Rain In Dolby Cinema made £9,978 on Wednesday, March 5 alone.

Park Circus’s latest re-release, of Steven Soderbergh’s Erin Brockovich, took £7,677.

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