No Tricks, Only Treats For ‘Halloween’ (2018) In Its Second Weekend
The Boogie Man came knocking, and audiences were quick to open the door for a second weekend in a row.
The Boogie Man came knocking, and audiences were quick to open the door for a second weekend in a row.
With only one notable new release this weekend, it should be easy for Michael Myers to make mince-meat out of the competition once again.
While there was no doubt that Halloween 2018 was going to be the big winner at the box office this weekend, there were questions about how big the the total would be for its debut weekend.
This weekend sees the release of one of the most anticipated films of 2018 with Halloween, a direct sequel to the 1978 John Carpenter classic starring Jamie Lee Curtis and directed by David Gordon Green. Make no mistake, this movie is going to be making all the money.
Last weekend’s big movies managed to maintain their spots at the box office for the second weekend in a row, while this weekend’s new releases really didn’t make much of a dent at all.Â
A slew of new releases head enter the box office fray, including First Man, but none of them with the real hype that both Venom and A Star Is Born continue to have going on.
To say that Sony’s Venom has bite would actually be understating things quite a bit, as the Rueben Fleischer-directed, Tom Hardy-starring film webbed up the biggest October debut in history.
It’s a HUGE weekend at the box office, as Sony tries to get audiences to embrace the anti-hero that is Venom, while Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga team up for their Oscar-buzz film, A Star Is Born.
It was a solid weekend for comedy superstars Kevin Hart and Tiffany Haddish, as their new film Night School debut at the top of the box office.
This weekend sees the release of Night School. which combines the talents of both Kevin Hart and Tiffany Hadish.
The House With A Clock In It’s Walls, Eli Roth’s first horror film for kids, debut in the top spot of the box office.
The latest Jack Black family film, ‘The House with a Clock in its Walls,’ should shoot to the top of an otherwise thin weekend at the movies.