Powered by women, 'Wuthering Heights' digs up $34.8 million at the box office for a No. 1 debut [View all]
Emerald Fennells bold reimagining of Wuthering Heights brought crowds of women to movie theaters this weekend. The Warner Bros. release topped the box office charts and nabbed the title for the years biggest opening with $34.8 million in ticket sales in its first three days in North American theaters, according to studio estimates Sunday. According to PostTrak polling, an estimated 76% of those ticket buyers were women. By the end of Mondays Presidents Day holiday, the total could rise to $40 million from its 3,682 locations.
The romantic drama starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as the star-crossed Catherine and Heathcliff, won out over the weekends other newcomers, including the animated GOAT and the heist thriller Crime 101. Its biggest day was Saturdays Valentines Day holiday, where it earned $14 million. Wuthering Heights is also performing even better internationally, where its expecting to rake in an additional $42 million from 76 territories.
The Warner Bros./MRC production cost a reported $80 million to produce, not accounting for the millions spent on marketing and promotion. If the four-day totals match the estimates, that makes for a strong $82 million global debut. And the film still has several big openings on the horizon, in Japan and Vietnam on Feb. 27, and in China on March 13.
The success comes while the future of Warner Bros. hangs in the balance, as Paramount continues to sweeten its hostile takeover bid in hopes of winning out over Netflix. Wuthering Heights is the studios ninth No. 1 opening in a row.
Fennells version of Wuthering Heights, which takes many liberties with Emily Brontës novel, largely divided critics. Its currently sitting at a mixed 63% on Rotten Tomatoes. While that didnt dissuade audiences from buying tickets, only 51% of the opening weekend audience said that they would definitely recommend the film to friends. Moviegoers also gave it a less-than-stellar B CinemaScore.
https://apnews.com/article/wuthering-heights-box-office-d10e1c446826f2ef7b7029953d468875
I don't get this success at all. I saw in high school, when we were forced to read this book, that it was, at its core, about abuse and codependence, although I didn't have the word for codependence then. Hated it then and have hated movies of it since.