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Suicide Squad had a good opening at the box office despite harsh reviews

New York — The supervillain romp Suicide Squad shrugged off scathing reviews to open with an estimated $135.1m in North American ticket sales, scoring one of the year's biggest box-office debuts.

Pressure had risen on the performance of the Warner Bros. film, directed by David Ayer, following the studio's previous poorly received DC Comics film, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. But Suicide Squad proved a massive draw despite its much-derided lead-in. It set a record for an August opening, easily besting Marvel's 2014 hit Guardians of the Galaxy, which debuted with $94.3m.

Though the Warner Bros.-DC Comics alliance was again battered by bad reviews, Suicide Squad delivered at the box office.

"We learn as we go," said Jeff Goldstein, head of distribution for Warner Bros. "We've fine-tuned our strategy in terms of who's in charge and how we're approaching all our DC films. We're modifying it in an exciting way to make all the subsequent films as great as possible."

Not everything was roses for Suicide Squad, though, despite dominating the weekend. (The other new wide release, the feline animated release Nine Lives, debuted in sixth with a mere $6.5m.) After fans flocked to theatres on Thursday night and Friday, audiences dropped steeply on Saturday. That could forecast further sharp declines in coming weeks for the $175m film, which also came with a massive marketing budget.

That was the trajectory for Batman v Superman, which bowed with $166m in March but didn't make that much in its entire remaining run in North American theatres. Suicide Squad, the last tent-pole film of the summer, won't have much competition in the coming weeks, but it will need better word of mouth than Batman v Superman to keep luring audiences.

Audiences don't agree with critics

Audiences liked it better. Opening weekend crowds gave it a B-plus on CinemaScore.


The elephant in the room is that the reviews were harsh," Goldstein said. "Clearly there's disconnect between audiences and critics."

But in franchise building, leaving fans thirsting for more is nearly as important as box office. In that regard, the jury remains out on Suicide Squad. The coming weeks will show if crowds still materialise or quickly dissipate as they did for "Batman v Superman." The film also opened with $132m internationally, where it will likely go without a release in China, the world's second-largest movie market.

Warner Bros., with years of DC films in the works, has a lot riding on its comic movie rival to Marvel. Next up is Patty Jenkins' Wonder Woman in June.

"You can't put reviews in the bank. You can put money in the bank," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for comScore. "The long-term success of any movie is predicated on positive sentiment from the fans. For any movie, that's the most important aspect."

Warners could on Sunday celebrate crossing $1bn in 2016 domestic revenue, a mark it has achieved 16 years straight. The Suicide Squad debut also gave Smith, long one of the movies' top draws, the biggest opening of his career. (Second is 2007's I Am Legend with $77.2m.)

The top five for the weekend box office was otherwise filled with holdovers. The Matt Damon spy sequel Jason Bourne grossed $22.7 m in its second weekend. It's made $103.4m in two weeks for Universal. SXT Entertainment's Bad Moms also continued solid business with $14.2m in its second week, bringing the cumulative gross for the comedy to $51m.



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