Via THENUMBERS.COM, here's the weekend box office:
1 | N | Novocaine | Paramount Pi… | $8,809,436 | 3,365 | $2,618 | $8,809,436 | 1 | ||
2 | N | Black Bag | Focus Features | $7,607,250 | 2,705 | $2,812 | $7,607,250 | 1 | ||
3 | (1) | Mickey 17 | Warner Bros. | $7,435,030 | -61% | 3,807 | n/c | $1,953 | $33,212,062 | 2 |
4 | (2) | Captain America: Brave New World | Walt Disney | $5,693,168 | -32% | 3,250 | -230 | $1,752 | $185,611,080 | 5 |
5 | (-) | The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie | Ketchup Ente… | $3,158,830 | 2,827 | $1,117 | $3,158,830 | 14 | ||
6 | N | The Last Supper | Pinnacle Peak | $2,777,234 | 1,575 | $1,763 | $2,777,234 | 1 | ||
7 | (5) | Paddington in Peru | Sony Pictures | $2,677,646 | -28% | 2,489 | -596 | $1,076 | $41,220,512 | 5 |
8 | (6) | Dog Man | Universal | $2,545,010 | -25% | 2,407 | -346 | $1,057 | $92,862,675 | 7 |
9 | (4) | The Monkey | Neon | $2,488,551 | -36% | 2,294 | -661 | $1,085 | $35,235,567 | 4 |
10 | (3) | Last Breath | Focus Features | $2,296,580 | -44% | 2,661 | -429 | $863 | $18,559,400 | 3 |
First thoughts? Thrilled BLACK BOX opened strong ("BLACK BAG (great film) and Spielberg book"). Strong for an adult movie. But it's not a strong weekend. NOVOCAINE and MICKEY 17 are really not hits. They were made for a young audience. MICKEY's already fallen to number three in its second weekend and both of those movies are going to be lucky to make $60 million in North American ticket sales.
It was a lousy weekend. And young audiences go in for the thrill of new. BLACK BAG could end up making $30 million more before it finishes its run because older audiences tend to see a movie beyond opening weekend. Also check out the theater count. BLACK BAG was in over 500 less theaters than NOVOCAINE. That really shows how weak NOVOCAINE is.
More bad news? Only one film in the top ten has ranked in over $100 million -- CAPTAIN AMERICA: BRAVE NEW WORLD.
Going out with C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"
Disabled veteran Don Carter rode shotgun in his son’s Chevy pickup truck for 11 hours from Illinois to the nation’s capital to take part in a political protest for the first time in his life.
Carter, a 92-year-old Korean War veteran, and his son, Larry, joined a crowd of nearly 3,000 for a two-hour national veterans’ rally Friday on the National Mall to protest cuts by President Donald Trump to veterans’ federal jobs, services and benefits.
The pair watched as fellow veterans waved American flags and speakers rallied support for the 30,000 federal workers fired by Trump’s administration. With chants of “Lock him up,” the crowd called for Trump to be removed from office for his actions.
Similar protests were held at state capitols across the nation, according to Fourteenth Now, the event organizer.
“Two billionaires, Trump and Musk, are gutting the VA and purging veteran employees — bankrupting war heroes while cashing in on their sacrifice,” said Michael Embrich, a Navy veteran and political commentator for Rolling Stone, who rallied protesters from a small stage.
Rallygoers called out the harm that’s come from mass firings at federal agencies, especially on the veteran community, many of whom are now out of a job. Chris Yeazel, an Army veteran who lives in D.C., said he’s seen this harm firsthand.
“I get my healthcare from DCVA,” Yeazel said. “I was up there about a week ago, and wait times are longer, half the offices are shut down, lights out, and you can hear veterans talking about it, they’re not blaming the workers, by the way.”
Speakers and attendees also touched on the GOP’s spending bill, which keeps the government funded, but at the expense of deep cuts to D.C.’s budget and government programs many veterans rely on.
Protesters on the National Mall — many of them veterans — called for the impeachment of President Donald Trump Friday.
Homemade signs denouncing Trump and Elon Musk and demanding the president be removed from office were everywhere — “No kings! No DOGE! No cuts to VA!” “Stop the coup,” and “I serve no kings.”
For well over an hour, they listened to speakers point out what they called Trump’s abuse of the office of the presidency.
They included Harry Dunn, a former Capitol Police officer who fought the mob Jan. 6 and ran for Congress in Maryland.
“Donald Trump has referred to Jan. 6 as a day of love,” he said. “This right here is love. I feel this; I love you all. And you all make me, you all give me whatever the hell I’ve got inside of me that makes me want to keep going and not stop.”
The veterans who joined Friday's protest ranged from ones who have been frequent protesters to first-timers, from Vietnam veterans to Global War on Terrorism veterans, and from those who have personally been hit by the cuts to those who simply felt it was their duty to speak out as veterans.
One person that made sure she attended the march was Rebecca Logan. She told WTOP that her husband drove her up from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Asked why she wanted to attend the massive protest, Logan said, "To help save my country."
The attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, motivated Logan to join the Air Force after she graduated from high school.
Logan needed the help of a walker as she made her way to the National Mall. As she crossed Independence Avenue, she said she had a message for her fellow veterans: "I know a lot of the veterans voted for Trump. You were lied to, and it's OK to stand up and say, 'Hey, this is not OK'."
They protested in Columbus, Ohio and (below) in Springfield, Illinois..
In Olympia, Washington.
A large group of veterans gathered Friday afternoon on the steps of the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul in solidarity with a similar march in Washington, D.C.
[. . .]
Protesters in St. Paul could be seen holding signs titled “America: Fight for Veterans,” “We Love the VA,” “Thank You Vets,” and others.
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