Freddy Mercury biopic ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ soars at box office

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LOS ANGELES, Nov 6, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Freddy Mercury biopic “Bohemian
Rhapsody” soared to the top spot at the North American box office over the
weekend, proving again that audiences matter more than critics.

The film unexpectedly pulled in $51 million, industry tracker Exhibitor
Relations said on Monday, coming in well ahead of Disney’s new “The
Nutcracker and the Four Realms,” at $20 million, and Paramount’s “Nobody’s
Fool,” with $13.8 million.

“Rhapsody,” with Egyptian-American actor Rami Malek starring as the
charismatic Mercury, thus logged one of the best openings ever for a music
biopic.

The movie has received decidedly mixed reviews, however. Vox.com dismissed
it as “a crashingly dull movie about … one of the least drab humans who
ever lived,” while The Washington Post called it a “bad movie that works,
even when it shouldn’t.”

But Malek, a Primetime Emmy winner for his role in TV’s “Mr. Robot,” has
won mostly high praise.

While Fox essentially paid the $50 million production cost of “Rhapsody”
with the film’s opening-weekend take, Disney was not faring as well with
“Nutcracker,” which cost $125 million to make. The studio hopes the classic
Christmas tale will hold on through the holidays, Variety said.

But like “Rhapsody,” the Keira Knightley film got some less-than-glowing
reviews. “Tchaikovsky,” said Rolling Stone, “is rolling in his grave.”

Nor did “Nobody’s Fool,” Tyler Perry’s first R-rated comedy, do much
better on the critic’s couch, with HollywoodReporter.com deploring its
“clumsy, misshapen script.” It stars the popular Tiffany Haddish as a newly
paroled woman who tries to help her sister get revenge on a man who deceived
her.

In fourth place, Warner Bros.’s “A Star Is Born” earned a solid $11
million in its fifth week out. Bradley Cooper, in his directorial debut,
plays a hard-drinking musician who has a star-crossed love affair with a
talented young singer played by Lady Gaga.

Not far behind in fifth was Universal’s “Halloween,” at $10.8 million. The
low-budget horror film has Laurie Strode (played again by Jamie Lee Curtis)
in a final confrontation with a masked homicidal maniac decades after she
survived his first killing spree.