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‘Michael’ Takes Back No. 1 From ‘Devil Wears Prada 2’ at Box Office

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After two weekends sitting behind “The Devil Wears Prada 2” on the box office charts, Lionsgate/Universal’s “Michael” is back in the No. 1 slot in its fourth weekend in theaters as it continues to hold strong in its quest to become the first $1 billion biopic in history.

Antoine Fuqua and Jaafar Jackson’s ode to the King of Pop made $7 million on its fourth Friday in theaters and is estimated to earn between $25-28 million this weekend by Lionsgate, with industry estimates predicting around $27 million for a weekend-to-weekend drop of just 28%. This will push the film past $280 million domestic and keeps it on pace to pass the $330 million domestic/$975 million global total of “Oppenheimer” for the all-time biopic record.

“Devil Wears Prada 2” took a much steeper 52% drop in its third weekend with Mother’s Day now in the rear-view mirror, but the film is still a success for Disney and 20th Century as its industry estimated $20 million weekend total will bring its domestic cume to $177 million, keeping it on course to pass $200 million domestic and $600 million worldwide.

In third is the sole newcomer in the top 5: Focus Features’ “Obsession,” the ruthless debut horror film from director Curry Barker about a young man who wishes for his friend to fall in love with him against her will. After a $6.8 million opening day from 2,815 locations, the film is looking at a $14.5 million opening weekend, the strongest opening for Focus since the $18 million start for “Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale” last September.

“Obsession” got rave reception from critics and festival attendees its TIFF midnight section premiere last year, and its wide release has been no different. Both its audience and critics Rotten Tomatoes scores stand at 95%, and it has received an A- on CinemaScore, joining a rare club of horror films to hit that mark including “Get Out” and “Weapons.”

That could allow the film to turn this strong start into an excellent Memorial Day weekend hold and endure even against strong competition from A24’s “Backrooms” at the end of the month.

More to come…

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Rose Leslie Joins Russell Crowe In ‘The Last Druid’, Filming In June

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EXCLUSIVE: Rose Leslie (Game Of Thrones), Andreas Pietschmann (Nuremberg), and Daniel Zovatto (Don’t Breathe) are joining Oscar winner Russell Crowe in action-drama The Last Druid, which will begin production on June 8 in Barcelona and the Canary Islands, Spain.

A quarter century after Crowe waged war on the Roman Empire in Gladiator, the actor is once again set to stir the warrior within. The movie will tell the story of a Roman Emperor who discovers a secluded Druid stronghold in the mountains of Caledonia. A peaceful Celtic elder (Crowe) must take up arms to protect his family and people from annihilation.

William Eubank (Paranormal Activity: Next of Kin) is directing from a script by Eubank, Phil Gawthorne (Modern Life is Rubbish) and Carlyle Eubank (Muzzle).

Pic is being produced by Adrián Guerra (Buried), Brian Kavanaugh-Jones (Longlegs), Fred Berger (La La Land) and Ben Pugh (The Courier), and executive-produced by Núria Valls, Xavier Parache, AJ Bourscheid, Brandon Millan, Sam Wasson, George Hsieh and Stuart Ford.

As we previously revealed, Stuart Ford’s AGC has pre-sold the film in multiple international markets, including to Amazon for a handful of territories. The company will continue dealmaking on the film at this week’s Cannes market.

Crew includes director of photography Agustin Claramunt (Land of Bad), production designer Laia Colet (Bird Box: Barcelona), costume designer Alberto Valcárcel (The Embassy), special effects supervisor Pau Costa (Den of Thieves: Pantera) and line producer Rubén Gómez.

Range Media Partners and CAA Media Finance arranged financing for the picture with Nostromo Pictures and are representing the U.S. rights. AGC international is handling sales in the rest of the world.

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‘Sheep in the Box’ Review: Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Drippy Human-AI Drama

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Hirokazu Kore-eda brings his customary warmth and generosity of spirit to the seemingly cold presence of GenAI in our lives in Sheep in the Box (Hako no naka no hitsuji), in which grieving parents hope to ease their pain by embracing a humanoid built in their dead son’s image. The Japanese director has no shortage of ideas — chief among them the potential for advanced robotics to bring closure to the bereaved. But too few of those ideas yield satisfying conclusions, resulting in a drama that becomes treacly and insubstantial, reaching for a profundity that remains elusive.

Family dynamics have frequently been at the heart of Kore-eda’s films, invariably distinguished by his exceptional direction of children. Something of a motif in his work is the resilience and resourcefulness of kids, which continues here with a robot that outgrows the need for his adoptive parents, just as flesh-and-blood children do when it’s time to seek independence. But these and other thematic threads lack both definition and emotional heft, making the movie feel flimsy, especially considering its two-hours-plus run time.

Sheep in the Box

The Bottom Line

Beautifully made but thematically woolly.

Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Competition)
Cast: Haruka Ayase, Daigo, Rimu Kuwaki
Director-screenwriter: Hirokazu Kore-eda

2 hours 6 minutes

Despite occasional detours into fantasy like 1998’s sublime After Life, Kore-eda is fundamentally a naturalistic filmmaker with a marked humanist vein that has often tagged him as an Ozu descendant. Which makes the prospect of him tackling a near-future sci-fi scenario sound of interest. The droll futuristic touches of the opening scenes — a delivery drone that could pass for a mini-UFO carrying parcels high above a city coastline; a robot crossing guard trailed by a string of children — hold the promise of low-key humor.

That drone touches down at the address of architect Otone Komoto (Haruka Ayase), who designed her family’s modernist home, an arrangement of overlapping boxes stacked around a garden courtyard. It was built by her carpentry and construction tradesman husband Kensuke (Japanese TV comic Daigo). When the camera pans to a framed photo of their 7-year-old boy Kakeru (Rimu Kuwaki), composer Yuta Bandoh’s melancholy score provides an unsubtle hint that the boy is no longer with them.

One of the parcels delivered contains a heart-shaped package that opens to release a hologram of a luna moth, the logo of a company called REbirth that specializes in generative AI humanoid replicas of deceased loved ones. It turns out the Komotos were first approached by a rep two years earlier at their son’s funeral and are eligible for a free promotional trial. 

Otone is somewhat curious, given how acutely she still feels Kakeru’s absence, but Kensuke is more skeptical. They make an appointment at the REbirth offices and listen to the sales pitch but remain uncertain until a young boy around their son’s age when he died approaches them in the cafeteria. Astonished by how lifelike the robot child is, they sign up for the program, submitting photos, videos and other info on Kakeru to be fed into his design.

When the new model Kakeru is delivered, Otone is overjoyed, even if the boy’s communication skills are basic, at first limited to “Mama, I’m home.” But “papa” is tougher to convince, dismissing the new arrival with cracks about Tamagotchis and Roombas before heading out to play baseball for the day. 

Most directors would look for conflict in the inevitable incompatibilities between grieving parents with human feelings and a humanoid with no emotions and no needs beyond his overnight charging station. But Kore-eda dawdles over all that without ever finding much dramatic nuance, making for a dullish midsection.

Things come briefly to life when Otone’s judgy mother shows up uninvited, faints at the sight of her dead grandson and then scoffs at the folly of replacing the boy with a machine, reminding Otone that she’s still young enough to have another child. But even that fails to generate tangible drama, as do ongoing tensions about the circumstances of the real Kakeru’s death.

More intriguing is the appearance of a youth in black, followed by a handful of other children with whom Kakeru finds kinship as they spend time each day in an abandoned warehouse making mysterious plans. 

While Kore-eda’s take on the existential threat of AI is refreshingly free of violence, rebellion and gloom, it’s also a bit predictable in its conclusion that the humanoids’ accelerated learning capabilities will soon make their human families superfluous. And the writer-director tips his hand by having Kakeru collect the offcuts from Otone’s architectural models and start building his own model in secret.

The film’s most original idea is the instinctual connection of robots to aspects of nature like the networks of trees nourished and protected by a “mother tree” that functions like a central computer hub. Sure, there are dystopian shadings in the inference that robots will form their own communities, leaving people behind. But Kore-eda is more interested in a smiley-happy outcome of mutual accord, which is pushed into sentimental overdrive by increasingly cloying slatherings of Bandoh’s score.

Shot by Ryuto Kondo, who also served as cinematographer on Kore-eda’s wonderful Palme d’Or-winning Shoplifters and the more recent Monster, the film looks sharp, with lots of striking aerial shots and gorgeous natural light in the many outdoors scenes. It’s also well-acted, notably by Ayase, the lead in Kore-eda’s Our Little Sister, whose gentle disposition and unforced sweetness are an ideal match for the director’s sensibility.

But Sheep in the Box (the title comes from The Little Prince, another motif) is unquestionably a minor entry in the Kore-eda canon. If you want to see a stimulating meditation on humanoid-human interaction that’s genuinely moving, seek out Kogonada’s criminally under-appreciated After Yang, from 2021.

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Box Office Thriller: ‘Michael’ Returns to No. 1, ‘Obsession’ a Win

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In a moonwalk for the box office history books, Antoine Fuqua’s record-smashing Michael Jackson biopic is returning to No. 1 in its fourth weekend with as much as $27 million domestically, only days after dancing past the $600 million mark globally. And last weekend, it became the top-grossing music biopic of all time ahead of Bohemian Rhapsody in North America, not adjusted for inflation.

Michael, from Lionsgate and producer Graham King, is benefiting from the failure of the video game adaptation Mortal Kombat II to turn into a crowd pleaser beyond its core fanbase.

Last weekend, almost all Imax screens went to New Line’s Mortal Kombat, but the martial arts sequel has underwhelmed and ceded much of its Imax footprint to Michael and a 20th anniversary celebration of Tom Cruise’s Top Gun franchise that includes screenings of both the first film and the more recent Top Gun: Maverick (the double billing is expected to earn an estimated $2.6 million).

David Frankel’s The Devil Wears Prada 2 also continues to dominate even as it cedes first place to Michael domestically. And on Friday, the 20th Century and Disney sequel sashayed past the $500 million mark globally to become the top-grossing female-fueled pic since Barbie, not adjusted.

Prada 2 is expected to gross another $20 million or so domestically in its third outing for a North American tally of around $178 million through Sunday (while it has access to a number of premium large-format screens, it was never remastered to play in Imax). But Disney’s film empire will soon be the ruler of all premium-large format auditoriums when Memorial Day tentpole Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu opens around the world this week.

Another title performing nicely in the lull before Grogu: emerging director Curry Barker‘s supernatural horror film Obsession, which is headed for a third-place finish this weekend with $15 million after costing a mere $1 million to produce. That’s well ahead of a $10 million to $12 million debut. Obsession has won over both critics and audiences in equal measure, boasting a coveted 94 percent score among both categories on Rotten Tomatoes as of midday Saturday.

Barker, 26, has spent the past few years amassing an avid fan base on YouTube with his sketch comedy channel, That’s a Bad Idea. He next made the $800 found-footage serial killer feature Milk & Serial, which went viral. Almost overnight, everyone in town was trying to win him over; he ultimately signed UTA.

Obsession, which Focus Features acquired out of TIFF for around $15 million, stars Michael Johnston as a young man who has long been in love with a friend Nikki (played by Inde Navarrette), and hopes that she will one day feel the same. But disastrous consequences ensue when he buys a One Wish Willow, which promises its users it will grant one wish upon splitting it in half, and wishes for his friend to love him. Cooper Tomlinson, Megan Lawless and Andy Richter also star.

Mortal Kombat II could tumble as much as 67 percent for a domestic gross of $12 million to $13 million after opening to a tepid $38 million last weekend.

Amazon MGM’s family-friendly film The Sheep Detectives, likewise a critical and audience favorite, is expected to round out the top five with $10 million in its sophomore outing. The comedy-mystery follows a flock of talking sheep who are determined to solve the suspicious death of their beloved shepherd, played by Hugh Jackman, who read them detective novels on a regular basis despite having no idea they could understand him. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, directors of the 2026 box office hit Project Hail Mary, are among the film’s executive producers.

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