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The Dark Tower tops slow weekend at the American box office

New York - After a decade of development and several postponements, the long-awaited Stephen King adaptation The Dark Tower debuted with an estimated $19.5m in North American ticket sales, narrowly edging out the two-week leader Dunkirk.

The modest result for The Dark Tower, starring Idris Elba and Matthew McConaughey, was in line with expectations heading into the weekend but well shy of initial hopes for a possible franchise-starter.

J.J. Abrams and Ron Howard are among the directors who previously tried to tackle King's magnum opus, a seven-book series that melds sci-fi with horror and other genres.

But the long battle to make The Dark Tower ended with poor reviews and few fireworks. Still, the movie was made for a relatively modest amount: about $60m, or half of what many other summer movies cost. Sony Pictures also split costs with Media Rights Capital.

"It was always an ambitions and bold undertaking but it was made at the right price," said Adrian Smith, president of domestic distribution for Sony Pictures.

By comparison, the recent flop Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, which opened with $17m, cost at least $180m to make.

Christopher Nolan's World War II epic Dunkirk slid to second with $17.6m in its third week. It's now made $133.6m domestically. Other holdovers — The Emoji Movie ($12.4m in its second week) and Girls Trip ($11.4m in its third week) followed.

Another long-delayed film also made its debut. The Halle Berry thriller Kidnap opened with $10.2m. The film, styled after the Liam Neeson Taken series, was released by the new distributor Aviron Pictures after it bought the North American rights from Relativity. Before entering bankruptcy, Relativity had scheduled the film's release for 2015.

But Kidnap still outperformed the week's other new wide release, the far more anticipated Detroit. The Kathryn Bigelow-directed docudrama is also the first release for an upstart distributor.

The first film distributed by Megan Ellison's Annapurna Pictures, Detroit debuted with a disappointing $7.3m after a limited release last week. As a producer, Ellison, the Oracle heiress, has been behind some of the most acclaimed films in recent years, including Foxcatcher and American Hustle.

Detroit, the third collaboration between Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal (The Hurt Locker, Zero Dark Thirty), reimagines the terror-filled events around the Algiers Motel incident during the 1967 Detroit riots.

"We wish more people had showed up this weekend but we are really, really proud of the movie," said Erik Lomis, Annapurna's distribution chief. "The movie got an A-minus CinemaScore and the reviews have been spectacular."

Though hard-hitting, auteur-driven films are typically fall material, Annapurna timed the release of Detroit to the 50th anniversary of the riots. Lomis said the intention was to bring the film to as broad an audience as possible.

"We believe that smart audiences actually want and will see great movies all year round," he said.

In limited release, Taylor Sheridan's Indian reservation thriller Wind River, starring Jeremy Renner, debuted with a strong per-screen average of $13 053 in four theaters. The Weinstein Co. release was written and directed by Sheridan, the screenwriter behind the Oscar-nominated Hell or High Water.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters according to comScore. Where available, the latest international numbers also are included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

Here are the top 10:

1. The Dark Tower, $19.5m

2. Dunkirk, $17.6m

3. The Emoji Movie, $12.4m

4. Girls Trip, $11.4m

5. Kidnap, $10.2m

6. Spider-Man: Homecoming, $8.8m

7. Atomic Blonde, $8.2m

8. Detroit, $7.3m

9. War for the Planet of the Apes, $6m

10. Despicable Me 3, $5.3m

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