Box office: 'Sonic 2' booms to $71 million, Michael Bay's 'Ambulance' stalls

It's a hopeful indication that family audiences are feeling better about returning to the theatre.


Reuters April 11, 2022

LONDON:

Sonic the Hedgehog 2 powered to $71 million in its domestic box office debut, a hopeful indication that family audiences are feeling better about returning to the theatre.

In taking the No. 1 spot, Paramount's kid-friendly film towered over Sony's Marvel adaptation Morbius and Universal's Michael Bay action-adventure Ambulance, which debuted to a disappointing $8 million.

Ticket sales for Sonic the Hedgehog 2 set a new high watermark for video game adaptations, supplanting the opening weekend record established by its predecessor, 2020's Sonic the Hedgehog. The first movie collected $58 million in its first three days of release and ended the President's Day holiday weekend with a mighty $70 million.

"This is an outstanding opening," says David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm Franchise Entertainment Research. "With solid reviews and very good audience scores, 'Sonic' is going to have a strong run."

Jeff Fowler returned to direct Sonic the Hedgehog 2 after steering the original film to $319 million globally and setting a record for the highest-grossing video game adaptation in North America. Ben Schwartz returned to voice the speedy blue creature with a knack for busting bad guys and Jim Carrey reprised his role as mad scientist Doctor Robotnik, a combo that has proven to be a hit among moviegoers. Sonic 2 landed an "A" CinemaScore from audiences.

Sonic the Hedgehog 2 cost $90 million, far more than the $40 million that Bay and Universal shelled out for "Ambulance." That's a relatively cheap price tag for Ambulance, which is heavy in explosives and special effects. However, the $40 million figure does not include the many millions spent on marketing and other efforts necessary to spread the word about the movie's release.

The lacklustre start for Ambulance is yet another sign of consumers' changing tastes. The kind of adrenalized, physics-defying mojo that turned Bay's past films like Armageddon and Pearl Harbor into zeitgeist-y hits doesn't always work these days. In the current movie theatre environment, fewer genres seem to be resonating with ticket buyers.

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