Jordan Peele's 'Nope' debuts to No. 1 with $44 million I Latest Stories
 
 
 
 
 
 

Jordan Peele’s ‘Nope’ debuts to No. 1 with $44 million

/ 10:00 AM July 25, 2022

Audiences responded with a resounding “yep” to Jordan Peele’s science-fiction thriller “Nope,” which topped the box office with its $44 million debut.

Those ticket sales were slightly behind projections of $50 million and fell in between Peele’s first two films, 2017’s “Get Out” (which opened to $33 million) and 2019’s “Us” (which opened to $71 million). “Nope” may not have cemented a new box office record for Peele, but it marks a strong start for an original, R-rated horror film.

“The opening isn’t as big as ‘Us,’ but it’s still extremely impressive,” says David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm Franchise Entertainment Research.

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It’s worth noting that Peele’s sophomore feature “Us,” a scary story about menacing doppelgangers, enjoyed an especially huge opening weekend because it followed the runaway success of the Oscar-winning “Get Out.” After his directorial debut captured the zeitgeist by delivering scares while encouraging audiences to think, audiences were more than a little eager to watch Peele’s next mind-bending nightmare. Box office expectations for “Nope,” another complex social thriller, were comparatively a little more Earth-bound.

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“Nope” cost $68 million, which is significantly more than “Get Out” (with its slender $4.5 million budget) and “Us” (with its $20 million budget). So the movie will require a little more coinage than Peele’s past films to turn a profit. “Get Out” and “Us” was wildly successful in theaters, with each collecting $255 million at the global box office.

“Nope” reunites Peele with “Get Out” star Daniel Kaluuya — and adds Keke Palmer and Steven Yeun to the mix — in the story of siblings who live on a gulch in California and attempt to uncover video evidence of a UFO. Critics were fond of “Nope,” which holds an 82% on Rotten Tomatoes. Audiences gave the film a “B” grade, the same CinemaScore as “Us.”

Since “Nope” was the only new movie to open this weekend, several holdover titles rounded out North American box office charts.

Disney’s “Thor: Love and Thunder” slipped to second place after two weeks in the No. 1 spot. The Marvel adventure added $22.1 million (a 53% decline) from 4,370 locations, taking the film’s domestic tally to $276.2 million. Globally, the fourth “Thor” movie has grossed $598 million and will imminently cross the $600 million mark. It’s already out-earned two of its three predecessors, 2011’s “Thor” ($335 million) and 2013’s “Thor: The Dark World” ($446 million). However, it still has a ways to go to match (or beat) 2017’s charmer “Thor: Ragnarok” ($853 million).

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