Shang-Chi, Marvel's first film led by an Asian superhero, shatters Labour Day box office records
'We are the underdog; the underestimated. We are the ceiling-breakers,' Canadian star Simu Liu says on Twitter
On what's traditionally one of the sleepiest weekends at the movies, the Marvel film Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings smashed the record for Labour Day openings with an estimated $71.4 million in ticket sales, giving a box office reeling from the recent coronavirus surge a huge lift heading into the fall season.
The Friday to Sunday gross for the movie, Marvel's first film led by an Asian superhero, ranks as one of the best debuts of the pandemic, trailing only the previous Marvel film Black Widow ($80.3 million US in July). Overseas, it pulled in $56.2 million US for a global three-day haul of $127.6 million US. Disney anticipates Shang Chi, which cost about $150 million US to make, will add $12.1 million US domestically on Monday.
The Walt Disney Co. opted to release Shang-Chi only in theatres, where it will have an exclusive 45-day run. Some of the studio's releases this year, including Black Widow, have premiered simultaneously in theatres and on Disney+ for $30 US.
The strong opening of Shang-Chi — forecasts had been closer to $50 million US — was a major relief for Hollywood, which had seen jittery releases the last few weeks during rising COVID-19 cases driven by the delta variant. Several upcoming films have recently postponed out of the fall, including Paramount Pictures' Top Gun: Maverick, Jackass Forever and Clifford the Big Red Dog.
Disney's weekend, though, should lend confidence to upcoming big-budget releases, such as the James Bond film No Time to Die from MGM and United Artists Releasing, and Sony Pictures' Venom: Let There Be Carnage.
"Shang-Chi is the ultimate confidence-builder for the theatrical movie industry," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for data firm Comscore.
"This was a very important film. This was the first Marvel movie that's opened exclusively theatrically since Spider-Man: Far From Home in July 2019. Shang-Chi is a real testament of the power of a theatrical-first strategy to drive huge numbers of moviegoers to the multiplex."
Movie release strategies at play
Perhaps nobody was celebrating Sunday more than theatre owners. Exhibitors have argued simultaneous theatrical and streaming releases — also known as "day-and-date" releases — significantly cannibalize ticket sales. Warner Bros., which is putting all of its 2021 releases simultaneously on HBO Max, has vowed to end the practice next year.
Adding to that argument is the continuing strong performance of Free Guy, from Disney's 20th Century Studios. Free Guy, contractually obligated to be released only in theatres, has grossed $239.2 million US globally. Without an in-home option, the Ryan Reynolds film has held especially strongly; it added $8.7 million US in North America over the weekend, good for third place. In China, Free Guy has made $57 million US in less than two weeks. (Shang-Chi doesn't yet have a China release date.)
Last week's top film, the Universal horror remake Candyman, slid to second place with $10.5 million US. After the holiday weekend, Universal pegs its two-week total at $41.9 million US.
Still, you could also read a case for streaming in Disney's figures Sunday. Shang-Chi, the studio noted, premiered roughly similarly to Black Widow, which debuted with about $160 million US globally but took in an additional $60 million US on Disney+ Premier Access.
Black Widow, a much more well-known property, launched before the delta variant was widespread in North America. Its release prompted a lawsuit from star Scarlett Johansson, who argued the day-and-date approach breached her contract and deprived her of potential earnings. Disney has said the release complied with Johansson's contract and called the suit without merit.
Disney has so far declined to telegraph its future theatrical intentions, including for its next Marvel movie, Eternals (due out Nov. 5). Bob Chapek, Disney's chief executive, earlier called the theatrical release of Shang-Chi "an interesting experiment" — a label that Canadian actor Simu Liu, who plays Shang-Chi, took exception with.
"We are not an experiment," Liu wrote on Twitter. "We are the underdog; the underestimated. We are the ceiling-breakers. We are the celebration of culture and joy that will persevere after an embattled year."
Rave reviews
At the recent exhibitor convention CinemaCon, where some studios pledged faith in the big screen, Disney didn't make a presentation and instead simply screened Shang-Chi. Directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, the film is based on a relatively little-known comic and features a largely Asian or Asian American cast, including Tony Leung, Awkwafina and Michelle Yeoh. Audiences and critics have heartily endorsed it. It has a 92 per cent fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes and an "A" CinemaScore from moviegoers.
The success of Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings came on a typically quiet weekend for Hollywood — one that would never normally feature the premiere of a new Marvel movie. The previous record over Labour Day weekend was $30.6 million US for 2007's Halloween. But the pandemic has upended once-orderly release schedules. Shang-Chi drove moviegoing overall not to just radically higher levels than the pandemic-marred Labour Day weekend last year, but far above attendance in 2019.