NEW YORK—Free Guy, an action comedy starring Ryan Reynolds as a background character in a videogame, opened better than expected over the weekend, collecting an estimated $28.4 million in ticket sales despite a marketplace challenged by Covid-19.

After a few weeks of declining audiences and underwhelming debuts amid the Delta variant surge, Free Guy succeeded with an old-school formula: an original, star-fronted movie with good word-of-mouth playing only in theaters. The movie directed by Shawn Levy was made by the Walt Disney Co.-owned 20th Century Fox, with a theatrical release contractually stipulated for the roughly $100 million production.

Playing in 4,165 North American theaters, Free Guy was expected to debut around $20 million. Its surprisingly strong opening gave further proof to what some analysts have been saying throughout the year—hybrid releases that send new movies immediately onto streaming platforms can significantly harm ticket sales. The last two No. 1 movies—Warner Bros.'s The Suicide Squad and Disney's Jungle Cruise—were launched simultaneously in theaters and homes.

But however movies are being released right now, box office conditions are far from ideal. The rise in US coronavirus cases  over the last month has corresponded with diminished ticket sales at theaters. Some cities, including New York and San Francisco, are preparing to make vaccine passports required for entering movie theaters.

David A. Gross, who runs the movie consultancy Franchise Entertainment Research, estimates that new releases are selling about half the tickets they normally would.

"Since Memorial Day weekend, the domestic box office has been running at approx. 50 percent of 2019 levels, with several spikes from strong titles, but then returning to 50 percent of 2019," Gross said in an e-mail. "Under normal conditions, Free Guy would be opening 50 percent higher than this weekend's number—comfortably."

But the enthusiasm for Free Guy was enough to lead Reynolds to announce on Saturday that Disney wants a sequel. In the film, Reynolds' character, Guy, realizes he's a "non playable character" in a "Grand Theft Auto"-like game. It features costars Jodie Comer, Lil Rel Howery and Taika Waititi.

Reviews were good (82 percent fresh on Rotten Tomatoes), and a male-heavy audience gave an "A" CinemaScore. (About 60 percent of moviegoers were male, Disney said.) Free Guy also added $22.5 million internationally.

Free Guy is also the latest in a comeback for gaming-based movies. After decades of futility, Hollywood is increasingly finding success by mining videogames for intellectual property. Reynolds starred in one of the best performing videogame adaptations—2019's Pokémon: Detective Pikachu, which grossed $432 million worldwide.

Free Guy will play exclusively in theaters for at least 45 days—and its strong performance through the weekend suggests it could buck the summer's typical trend of fast drop-offs.

Last week's top film, The Suicide Squad, slid steeply, dropping 70 percent in its second weekend. After its $26.2 million debut, James Gunn's Suicide Squad redo pulled in just $7.8 million for Warner Bros., bringing its two-week total to $42.9 million. It's concurrently playing on HBO Max.

That film's tumble gave a few other releases more room at multiplexes. Sony Pictures' horror sequel Don't Breathe 2 opened with $10.6 million, in line with studio projections. While Don't Breathe 2 debuted with less than half the opening of the 2016 original, the sequel was made with a modest budget of $15 million.

MGM and United Artists' Aretha Franklin biopic Respect, starring Jennifer Hudson, debuted with $8.8 million. Respect, which has drawn praise for Hudson's leading performance, also landed an "A" CinemaScore. Its audience was 66 percent female and nearly half of ticket buyers were Black. Disney's Jungle Cruise, starring Emily Blunt and Dwayne Johnson, landed in third place in its third weekend with $9 million. Its worldwide total is $154.3 million. It's also playing on Disney+ for an additional $30.

Apple didn't report grosses for CODA, one of the company's major movie acquisitions and one seen as a crowd-pleasing milestone in deaf representation of on-screen. The film, starring deaf actors Marlee Matlin, Troy Kotsur and Daniel Durant, was a prize-winning sensation at the Sundance Film Festival in January, where Apple plunked down a festival-record $25 million for the film. CODA, which stands for child of a deaf adult, debuted simultaneously in theaters and on Apple TV+.

Image courtesy of AP

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