NEW YORK—Just when a party was poised to break out in movie theaters, the below-expectation debut of In the Heights dampened Hollywood’s hopes of a swift or smooth recovery at the summer box office.
Jon M. Chu’s exuberant adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway musical opened with a modest $11.4 million, according to studio estimates on Sunday. Forecasts had ranged from $15-$20 million. The release of In the Heights—a lavish song-and-dance musical accompanied by glowing reviews from critic s and considered a milestone movie for Latinos—was widely seen as a cultural event.
On opening weekend, though, the Warner Bros. release narrowly missed the top spot. Instead, A Quiet Place Part II edged it with $11.7 million in its third weekend of release. (It’s close enough that the order could flip when final figures are released on Monday.) On Friday, John Krasinski’s thriller—playing only in theaters—became the first film of the pandemic to reach $100 million domestically. Its cumulative total is $109 million.
Sony’s Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway, a film originally planned to open around Easter 2020, also opened softly, debuting with an estimated $10.4 million.
After a string of good box-office weekends, the opening of In the Heights was a reminder of the challenges of the marketplace. Most theaters are operating at reduced capacities to allow social distancing. Canada’s theaters are largely closed. And getting crowds to come out for a movie that was simultaneously streaming on HBO Max, as In the Heights was, adds another complication.
Starring a mostly fresh-face cast including Anthony Ramos, Melissa Barrera, Corey Hawkins and Leslie Grace, In the Heights didn’t have the star power of musicals, such as Mamma Mia!”to give it a boost. Miranda, who performed the lead on Broadway, ceded the part to Ramos. Miranda plays a minor role.
Instead, the film will depend on strong word of mouth (it received an “A” CinemaScore from audiences) to propel a long run in theaters. Its hopeful comparison would be a movie like 2017’s The Greatest Showman, which opened to $18.8 million but held firmly for months, ultimately grossing $174.3 million in the US and Canada.
“We always thought that the movie has to do the heavy lifting,” said Jeff Goldstein, distribution chief for Warner Bros. “Even though it came in at a lighter level than we had expected, we’re proud of the movie that’s there and over time the hope is that we can get an audience to sample the movie and tell their friends to.” Regardless of box office, In the Heights is the rare bigger-budget spectacle film to feature a predominantly Latino cast. Though Latinos make up one of the largest groups of regular moviegoers (accounting for as much as 29 percent of tickets sold), their representation in Hollywood is still a fraction of that. According to audience surveys, about 40 percent of the opening-weekend audience for In the Heights was Hispanic.
The director Chu has previously helmed a breakthrough release for Asian Americans in 2018’s Crazy Rich Asians, which opened to $26.5 million over three days and then kept a multi-week lock on the box office. Recalling that—or perhaps sensing that In the Heights wasn’t going to debut like a blockbuster—Chu urged people to “vote with their wallets” by supporting the film.
“Even Crazy Rich Asians you couldn’t really tell. It was only the second weekend when people started coming back and the third weekend when people who didn’t go to the movies started to come,” said Chu a week ahead of release.
“Buying tickets to this thing—putting your money where your mouth is—was the democratic statement that no studio could make up.”