Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Ben Child

American Sniper to be highest-earning war movie ever, but Mortdecai dead in the water

Gunning for the top … Bradley Cooper in American Sniper.
Gunning for the top … Bradley Cooper in American Sniper. Photograph: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Picture/AP

Controversial Clint Eastwood drama American Sniper has topped the US box office with another $64.4m in its second week on wide release, while Johnny Depp comedy Mortdecai suffered the actor’s most disastrous debut in more than a decade.
Starring Bradley Cooper as the deadliest gunman in US military history, real-life Navy Seal Chris Kyle, American Sniper has now taken $200.1m in North America. It is on course to become the highest-grossing war film of all time, surpassing the $216.5m taken in 1998 by Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan, over the coming week.

Watch a video review

Low budget Jennifer Lopez psychological erotic thriller The Boy Next Door opened in second place with $15m on debut against costs of just $4m. Rob Cohen’s poorly-reviewed film stars Lopez as a newly separated high school teacher who encourages the attentions of the handsome new arrival in the neighbourhood until he turns out to be a bad egg.

Paddington, Paul King’s star-studded adaptation of the Michael Bond novels about an intelligent bear with a penchant for marmalade, landed in third place with another $12.3m. Starring Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins, Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent, Peter Capaldi, and Nicole Kidman, with Ben Whishaw as the voice of Paddington, the comedy continues to benefit from excellent reviews and has now scored $40m from the North American box office.

Watch a video review

The top five was rounded out by the Kevin Hart comedy The Wedding Ringer, with $11.6m in its second week for a total haul of $39.6m, and Liam Neeson action sequel Taken 3, with $7.6m in its third week for a total of $76m.

Elsewhere in the top 10 the George Lucas-produced animated fairytale fantasy Strange Magic landed at No 7 with a disappointing $5.5m in debut. The film, a riff on Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, has suffered from ghastly reviews.

Mortedecai fared even more grimly, however. Based on the Kyril Bonfiglioli novels about a dandyish and debonaire English art dealer, David Koepp’s comedy landed in ninth place on debut with just $4.1m. That counts as Depp’s worst opening in nearly 15 years.

Watch a video review

Mortedecai has suffered from middling reviews, but with a cast that also includes Gwyneth Paltrow, Ewan McGregor, Olivia Munn, Paul Bettany, and Jeff Goldblum, not to mention a $60m budget, would have expected a far more impressive return.
Meanwhile Peter Jackson’s final Hobbit instalment, The Battle of the Five Armies, scored the highest ever opening for a non-holiday three day weekend in China, $49.5m. The fantasy sequel’s total now stands at $866m worldwide.

North American box office 23-25 January

1. American Sniper: $64.3m, $200.1m

2. The Boy Next Door: $15m - new

3. Paddington: $12.3m, $40m

4. The Wedding Ringer: $11.6m, $39.6m

5. Taken 3: $7.6m, $76m

6: The Imitation Game: $7.1m, $60m

7: Strange Magic: $5.5m - new

8: Selma: $5.5m, $39.2m

9. Mortdecai: $4.125m - new

10: Into the Woods: $3.8m, $121.4m

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.