Batman v Superman smashes records with $424m global box office debut
Karthick Arvinth
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice stars Ben Affleck (left) as Batman and Henry Cavill as Superman
Reuters
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice topped the global box
office in its opening weekend, with the biggest overseas debut ever for a
superhero film.
The Man
of Steel sequel took $254m (£180m; €228m) from 66 markets in its first
five days, the fourth-biggest for any movie, despite lukewarm reviews
from critics.
In the US and Canada, the Zack Snyder movie soared to a
record March opening of $170.1m for a global total of $424.1m – the
fourth-best ever for a superhero film after three Marvel titles.
The superhero brawler is the first live-action film featuring both
Superman and Batman, and the first to feature portrayals of Wonder
Woman, Aquaman, Flash and Cyborg. It cost an estimated $250m to make.
"There is no question this is an extraordinary achievement," Warner Bros distribution head Jeff Goldstein was quoted as saying by Hollywood Reporter.
"Clearly,
audiences have embraced it and we are already seeing repeat business.
Often, there's a disconnect between critics and audiences."
Critics have widely panned the film, which stars Henry Cavill as Superman and Ben Affleck as Batman.
It holds a 29% approval rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes,
which assigned an average score of 5 out of 10 based on multiple
reviews.
However, a 73% audience approval rating on the same website suggests moviegoers are more forgiving of the superhero epic.
'Critic-proof'
IBTimes UK's Amy West
praised Affleck's performance as Batman and Jesse Eisenberg's Lex
Luthor, but found little else to like in a "cluttered" and "clunky"
film. The Daily Telegraph
called it a "meat-headed humourless mess" that defied "common sense and logic".
Israeli actress Gal Gadot stars as Wonder Woman in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
Reuters
"No
major blockbuster in years has been this incoherently structured, this
seemingly uninterested in telling a story with clarity and purpose," it
said.
"The opening
weekend of Batman v Superman was always going to be critic-proof – this
is a film for fans of all ages of the iconic comic book characters,"
box-office analyst Jeff Bock told Hollywood Reporter.
"However, the key element here is successive weekends, which
will likely suffer greatly. As it stands, Batman v Superman will likely
drop like a rock in its second weekend.
Easter was golden for Batman v Superman, but the aftermath might be rotten eggs."
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