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Monday, May 31, 2021

Dallas rapper Lil Loaded has died, officials confirm - The Dallas Morning News

Dallas rapper Lil Loaded, who had a viral hit with “6locc 6a6y” in summer 2019, has died.

The Dallas County medical examiner’s office confirmed that the 20-year-old, whose legal name was Dashawn Robertson, died Monday. His cause and manner of death have not been determined.

Robertson signed with Epic Records after “6locc 6a6y” went viral, with more than 25 million views on YouTube. That song was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America last week, and Robertson wrote in an Instagram post about the certification that he had the “dopest fanbase on earth.”

Ashkan Mehryari, an attorney for Robertson, said that his client’s death was “very tragic” and that he didn’t see it coming.

Mehryari said the record label believed strongly in Robertson and had invested heavily in his success.

“He had a very bright and promising music career ahead of him,” he said.

Stanley Gabart, whose production company worked with the record label, said the death of a young man who was so talented and full of joy came as a shock.

“This kid was on a great path,” he said, adding that he loved watching Robertson make music.

“He was struggling with some things we wish we would’ve known about, wish we could’ve intervened” and gotten to a different outcome, Gabart said.

Robertson was arrested last year on a murder charge in connection with the shooting of his best friend, 18-year-old Khalil Walker.

He was indicted on the lesser charge of manslaughter in February, and his attorney said at the time that there was no malice in the incident.

Court records show that Robertson, who was free on bond, had a hearing scheduled for Tuesday. Mehryari said the hearing was just an admonishment and that it had not been weighing on his client.

Lifelines of support

National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 24-hour crisis hotline at 1-800-273-8255. Confidential online chat is available at suicidepreventionlifeline.org

Crisis Text Line: 24-hour support by texting HOME to 741741. More information at crisistextline.org

North Texas Behavioral Health Authority: 24-hour crisis hotline at 1-866-260-8000 or go to ntbha.org

Suicide and Crisis Center of North Texas: Speak to a trained counselor on the 24-hour hotline at 214-828-1000 or 1-800-273-8255 or go to sccenter.org

Here For Texas Mental Health Navigation Line: Grant Halliburton Foundation initiative that connects North Texans with mental-health resources customized to each caller at 972-525-8181 or go to herefortexas.com

Dallas Metrocare Services: For help, call 1-877-283-2121 or go to metrocareservices.org

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Dallas rapper Lil Loaded has died, officials confirm - The Dallas Morning News
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Kate Winslet didn't let 'Mare of Easttown' crew cut her 'bulgy bit of belly' from sex scene - Entertainment Weekly News

Kate Winslet wouldn't let Mare of Easttown cut bulgy bit of belly from sex scene | EW.com

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Kate Winslet didn't let 'Mare of Easttown' crew cut her 'bulgy bit of belly' from sex scene - Entertainment Weekly News
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Stormi Webster Has Adorable Water Balloon Fight With Parents Kylie Jenner and Travis Scott - E! Online

Splashing around!

From the looks of Kylie Jenner's social media posts, she and Travis Scott are having a fun-filled Memorial Day Weekend with their 3-year-old daughter, Stormi Webster. On Monday, May 31, the Keeping Up With the Kardashians star took to Instagram Stories to share the cute water balloon fight the family had.

In one video, the "Sicko Mode" rapper could be seen filling up blue water balloons, as his little one eagerly awaited for them to be done. Another clip showed the toddler and her dad teaming up together to throw the balloons at the Kylie Cosmetics founder.

Stormi adorably tried to hit her mom with a water balloon after the Houston native successfully splashed Kylie. "No, don't throw it at me," Kylie jokingly told her daughter, but the 3-year-old star didn't oblige. "I'm leaving!"

"love this little baby," the 23-year-old beauty mogul captioned her post of Stormi, which showed the little one wearing a bright yellow dress.

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Stormi Webster Has Adorable Water Balloon Fight With Parents Kylie Jenner and Travis Scott - E! Online
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John Krasinski responds to Amy Schumer's joke that his marriage to Emily Blunt is for publicity - CNN

Schumer raved about the movie, a sequel to the 2018 horror film, writing that the first one "blew me away."
"I loved every second of @aquietplacemovie even better than the first one which blew me away. Amazing to be in a movie theater!!" Schumer captioned a picture of the movie. She added, "I've said for a long time I think Emily and John have a pretend marriage for publicity. But I still think you should see it this rainy weekend."
Krasinski, who also wrote the film, replied in the comments with,"Thank you Amy!... for blowing up our whole marriage spot."
Krasinski and Blunt married in 2010 and share two daughters.
Emily Blunt and John Krasinski.
Schumer was also in a joking mood after watching "Cruella," starring Emma Stone.
"It's well known Emma Stone is a toxic person but @disneycruella is amazing!!" she wrote on Instagram after watching the Disney movie.

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John Krasinski responds to Amy Schumer's joke that his marriage to Emily Blunt is for publicity - CNN
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Matthew Perry's 'Friends' Reunion Behaviour - ET Canada

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Matthew Perry's 'Friends' Reunion Behaviour - ET Canada
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Simon Cowell Cancels Appearance on ‘X Factor Israel’ - Billboard

Cowell broke his back in a bike accident last year and was forced to take a break from television to undergo surgery and extensive rehab.

Cowell, who created the original version of The X Factor in Britain, announced in December that he would appear as a judge on the fourth season of X Factor Israel. At the time, Cowell said he could “barely wait to see what the Israelis have to offer.”

Cowell’s team also helped the local show select judges for the new season, including Israeli singer and former Eurovision Song Contest winner Netta Barzilai, alongside Israeli singers Aviv Geffen, Ran Danker, Miri Mesika, and Margalit Tzanani.

For the first time this year, the winner of X Factor Israel will represent the country in the 2022 Eurovision Song Contest. The new season is set to air on Israeli TV channel Reshet 13 later this year.

This article originally appeared on THR.com.

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Simon Cowell Cancels Appearance on ‘X Factor Israel’ - Billboard
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'A Quiet Place Part II' Makes Serious Memorial Day Noise With A $48.4 Million Three-Day Bow; 'Cruella' Is Solid In Second With $21.3 Million - Box Office Mojo

Hollywood is finally back in business…and not a moment too soon. After 14 long months of darkened marquees and skittish moviegoers who opted to stay home and stream due to COVID-19, Memorial Day weekend arrived just in the nick of time.

In normal years, the holiday which unofficially kicks off summer has provided Hollywood with one of its biggest—and busiest—periods on the calendar. But the past year has been anything but normal, and few knew what to expect coming into the long weekend. Well, it turns out that the box office exceeded all industry expectations thanks to the one-two blockbuster punch of Paramount’sA Quiet Place Part II and Disney’s Cruella, which both had stronger-than-expected debuts. In fact, it was the first weekend in more than a year where the total domestic box-office take surpassed $100 million.

Winning the holiday weekend (by far) was the John Krasinski-directed follow-up to 2018’s surprise horror hit A Quiet Place. The eagerly anticipated sequel scared up $48.4 million in the three-day window between Friday and Sunday. Estimates for the PG-13 film’s four-day haul put its North American receipts at $58.5 million (with $5 million of that coming from IMAX screens), making it the biggest domestic opening of the pandemic era. The previous record holder was Warner Bros.’ Godzilla vs. Kong, which bowed to $32 million back in March 2021.

While early industry projections had the Emily Blunt-starring sequel landing in the $30-million range over its first three days, A Quiet Place Part II easily blew past those predictions and landed in the top spot with plenty of breathing space to spare. In fact, the movie’s Memorial Day weekend take nearly matched the original’s $50.2 million opening in 2018. The follow-up opened with a staggering $12,985 per-screen average in 3,726 theaters. And both critics and audiences seemed equally impressed with the film, giving it a 91% score on RottenTomatoes and an A- grade from CinemaScore.

Originally scheduled to hit theaters back on March 20, 2020, A Quiet Place Part II was one of the first major-studio pictures to be postponed due to COVID. And while many studios chose to steer their 2020 films over to various streaming platforms bypassing limited-capacity theaters, Paramount’s gamble to hold the film for a theatrical release until the pandemic began to recede seems to have paid off handsomely. Blunt and Co. should now have plenty of time to pad their film’s already-impressive numbers since it will be available solely on the big screen for 45 days before moving over to the Paramount+ streaming service.

In the runner-up spot was Disney’s Cruella, an origin story starring Emma Stone about the rise of 101 Dalmatians 's puppy-hating villain, Cruella de Vil. The PG-13-rated film also came out of the gate to solid numbers despite being available on Disney+ for an additional $30 fee. Cruella pulled in $21.3 million in the first three days of the long weekend, earning a $5,472 per-screen average in 3,892 locations. Its four-day gross is projected to hit $26.5 million. The film currently has a 72% score on RottenTomatoes and received a straight ‘A’ CinemaScore grade. One interesting footnote: female ticket buyers turned out to be a critical factor in the holiday weekend’s booming business, with women making up 53% of A Quiet Place Part II’s audience and 64% of Cruella’s.

In third place was Lionsgate’s horror flick Spiral, which took in just under $2.3 million over the weekend’s first three days in North America and an estimated $2.9 million for the four-day frame. The latest R-rated Saw installment saw its receipts fall off a steep -50.5% from the previous session while earning a $760 per-screen average in 2,991 theaters. Its three-week North American total now stands at $19.8 million. The ninth chapter in the splatter saga which kicked off in 2004 has tacked on an additional $6.8 million abroad to date, lifting its worldwide total to $27.2 million.

In fourth place was Jason Statham’s Wrath of Man. The United Artists’ action-thriller added $2.1 million domestically, which represented a -29.5% dip from the previous weekend (Its four-day projection is a little under $2.8 million). The R-rated film had a $698 per-screen average in 3,007 theaters. Its four-week North American total now sits at $22.1 million. However, Statham’s latest punch-‘em-up continues to translate well overseas, where it has accumulated $57.7 million in foreign markets, bringing the film’s combined worldwide gross to a hair under $80.5 million.

Rounding out the top five was Disney’s Raya and the Last Dragon. In its thirteenth (!) week, the PG-rated computer-animated adventure added just under $2 million domestically thanks to a +19.7% bump over the previous session (Its four-day projection is $2.6 million). Despite also being available on the Disney+ streaming platform for a $30 fee, the film had a $990 per-screen average in 2,015 theaters, bringing its domestic box-office total to $50.9 million. Overseas, Raya has racked up $77 million so far, pushing its current worldwide total to $128.5 million.

Meanwhile, the latest Fast and Furious sequel, F9, continues to burn rubber overseas. While the Vin Diesel-starrer will not cross the starting line on our shores until June 25, it has already zipped past the $200 million line in its first two weeks playing abroad. Its current international gross in just eight markets is a whopping $229 million and counting.

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'A Quiet Place Part II' Makes Serious Memorial Day Noise With A $48.4 Million Three-Day Bow; 'Cruella' Is Solid In Second With $21.3 Million - Box Office Mojo
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'Tarzan' actor Joe Lara among seven plane crash victims in Tennessee - Fox News

Joe Lara, who was known for playing Tarzan in the early 1990s television series 'Tarzan: The Epic Adventures' died Saturday in a plane crash with his wife, Gwen, and five other people. 

He was 58 years old. 

Rutherford County Fire Rescue Capt. John Ingle said in a statement Sunday that recovery efforts were ongoing at Percy Priest Lake near Smyrna, Tenn. He said efforts also were focused on examining a half-mile-wide debris field in the lake.

County officials identified the victims in a news release late Saturday as Brandon Hannah, Gwen S. Lara, William J. Lara, David L. Martin, Jennifer J. Martin, Jessica Walters and Jonathan Walters, all of Brentwood, Tennessee. Their names were released after family members had been notified.

'TARZAN' STAR RON ELY'S WIFE KILLED AT THEIR CALIFORNIA HOME: SOURCE

Gwen Shamblin Lara founded the Remnant Fellowship Church in Brentwood in 1999 and wrote a faith-based weight loss book. She and Joe were married for nearly three years. 

Actor Joe Lara was among seven people killed in a small plane crash on Saturday in Tenn. 

Actor Joe Lara was among seven people killed in a small plane crash on Saturday in Tenn.  (Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)

The Federal Aviation Administration said the Cessna C501 plane was heading from nearby Smyrna Rutherford County Airport to Palm Beach International Airport when it crashed Saturday morning. Authorities did not release registration information for the plane.

Smyrna is located about 20 miles (32 kilometers) southeast of Nashville. Percy Priest Lake is a reservoir created by the J. Percy Priest Dam. It is a popular spot for boating and fishing.

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"With dive teams in the water, we are strongly urging civilian boaters to stay away from the public safety boats," Ingle said.

The National Transportation Safety Board had a lead investigator at the site.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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'Tarzan' actor Joe Lara among seven plane crash victims in Tennessee - Fox News
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John Krasinski Responds to Amy Schumer's Joke That He and Emily Blunt’s Marriage Is for Publicity - Yahoo Entertainment

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images; Aaron Davidson/Getty Images

While fans may love John Krasinski and Emily Blunt's relationship, Amy Schumer isn't too convinced.

On Sunday, the 39-year-old shared on Instagram her informal review of A Quiet Place Part II, raving about the sequel to the 2018 horror film. The film was written and directed by Krasinski and stars his wife Blunt, who reprised her role as Evelyn Abbott. Schumer said the film "blew me away" despite her humorous personal thoughts about Blunt and Krasinski's marriage of nearly 11 years.

"I loved every second of @aquietplacemovie even better than the first one which blew me away. Amazing to be in a movie theater!!" Schumer said, captioning a photo from the film. She added, joking, "and although I've said for a long time I think Emily and John have a pretend marriage for publicity. But I still think you should see it this rainy weekend."

Krasinski, 41, hilariously replied in the comments saying, "Thank you Amy!... for blowing up our whole marriage spot."

Paramount Pictures

RELATED: John Krasinski Says He Was 'in Awe' of Wife Emily Blunt's Performance in A Quiet Place Part II

And Schumer didn't let up on social media. She also shared a quick note on her Instagram Story joking about Disney's Cruella, starring Emma Stone. "It's well known Emma Stone is a toxic person but @disneycruella is amazing!!" she wrote.

Krasinski and Blunt — who wed in 2010 and share daughters Violet, 4, and Hazel, 7 — recently admitted that they were actually nervous about working together. The Office actor told Entertainment Tonight that there were "a lot of unknowns" but he was ultimately "blown away and in awe" by his wife's performance, making A Quiet Place Part II even more exciting for the couple to work on than the first film in the horror series.

"She's the type of actress who can deliver that intensive performance and then ask you what they have at the [craft services table]. If you're able, and if you're talented enough to switch it on and off like that, you make my job easy," he added.

Kristina Bumphrey/StarPix/Shutterstock Emily Blunt and John Krasinski

The film, which also stars Cillian Murphy, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe and Djimon Hounsou, was originally scheduled to be released in March 2020 before being pushed back several times due to the pandemic.

While appearing on Jimmy Kimmel Live! last week, Blunt joked that the pandemic has been the "best marketing tool ever" after sharing that she's been promoting A Quiet Place Part II for over a year now. But she noted the plot of the movie is "surreal" because of what many people have been experiencing throughout the pandemic.

RELATED: A Quiet Place Part II Is 'Bigger, Faster, Louder': It 'Demands' to Be Seen 'on the Big Screen'

"In the first movie, their home gets decimated and destroyed. So, the family has to venture out and it's this big theme of needing your neighbor to extend their hand to you and yet we've been living in this world of nobody wanting to do that," she told host Jimmy Kimmel on the show, detailing the social distancing requirements that have been in place over the past year. "It has even more prominence now. It's sort of surreal."

A Quiet Place Part II is out in theaters now.

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John Krasinski Responds to Amy Schumer's Joke That He and Emily Blunt’s Marriage Is for Publicity - Yahoo Entertainment
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Olivia Rodrigo Smashes Records En Route to U.K. Chart Double - Billboard

That's also the biggest opening week for a debut album in two years, since Lewis Capaldi’s Divinely Uninspired To A Hellish Extent dropped in May 2019.

Sour racks up 45.7 million track streams over the seven-day cycle -- or 30,945 streaming-equivalent sales -- for the most first-week streams for a debut album, eclipsing Capaldi's record, according to the OCC.

The last artist to score the double with their debut was Sam Smith, who achieved the feat six years ago with2015's In The Lonely Hour and "Lay Me Down".

The big numbers keep coming, as "Good 4 U" gives Rodrigo her second leader following "Drivers License" back in January. "Good 4 U" generates 117,000 chart sales in seven days -- including 13.5 million streams -- for the biggest No. 1 single of 2021.

Sour leads an all-new Top 4, as Gary Numan's 22nd solo studio LP Intruder (BMG) starts at No. 2; U.S. alternative pop outfit Twenty One Pilots see their latest, Scaled and Icy (Atlantic/Fueled By Ramen), take off at No. 3; while P!nk's All I Know So Far: Setlist (RCA), the companion album to her concert film, starts at No. 4.

Shoegaze icons My Bloody Valentine return to the chart at No. 7 with their '90s classic Loveless, following a reissue campaign by Domino Records; and Super Furry Animals frontman Gruff Rhys has a highest-ever solo chart position with his seventh album Seeking New Gods. It's new at No. 10.

Over on the Official U.K. Singles Chart, BTS bags the U.K.’s highest new entry of the week with "Butter" (Big Hit Entertainment). It's new No. 3 for the K-pop phenom's second U.K. Top 5 single. "Butter" is the most downloaded single of the week, by a margin of more than 10,000 sales.

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Olivia Rodrigo Smashes Records En Route to U.K. Chart Double - Billboard
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'A Quiet Place Part II' Makes Serious Memorial Day Noise With A $48.4 Million Three-Day Bow; 'Cruella' Is Solid In Second With $21.3 Million - Box Office Mojo

Hollywood is finally back in business…and not a moment too soon. After 14 long months of darkened marquees and skittish moviegoers who opted to stay home and stream due to COVID-19, Memorial Day weekend arrived just in the nick of time.

In normal years, the holiday which unofficially kicks off summer has provided Hollywood with one of its biggest—and busiest—periods on the calendar. But the past year has been anything but normal, and few knew what to expect coming into the long weekend. Well, it turns out that the box office exceeded all industry expectations thanks to the one-two blockbuster punch of Paramount’sA Quiet Place Part II and Disney’s Cruella, which both had stronger-than-expected debuts. In fact, it was the first weekend in more than a year where the total domestic box-office take surpassed $100 million.

Winning the holiday weekend (by far) was the John Krasinski-directed follow-up to 2018’s surprise horror hit A Quiet Place. The eagerly anticipated sequel scared up $48.4 million in the three-day window between Friday and Sunday. Estimates for the PG-13 film’s four-day haul put its North American receipts at $58.5 million (with $5 million of that coming from IMAX screens), making it the biggest domestic opening of the pandemic era. The previous record holder was Warner Bros.’ Godzilla vs. Kong, which bowed to $32 million back in March 2021.

While early industry projections had the Emily Blunt-starring sequel landing in the $30-million range over its first three days, A Quiet Place Part II easily blew past those predictions and landed in the top spot with plenty of breathing space to spare. In fact, the movie’s Memorial Day weekend take nearly matched the original’s $50.2 million opening in 2018. The follow-up opened with a staggering $12,985 per-screen average in 3,726 theaters. And both critics and audiences seemed equally impressed with the film, giving it a 91% score on RottenTomatoes and an A- grade from CinemaScore.

Originally scheduled to hit theaters back on March 20, 2020, A Quiet Place Part II was one of the first major-studio pictures to be postponed due to COVID. And while many studios chose to steer their 2020 films over to various streaming platforms bypassing limited-capacity theaters, Paramount’s gamble to hold the film for a theatrical release until the pandemic began to recede seems to have paid off handsomely. Blunt and Co. should now have plenty of time to pad their film’s already-impressive numbers since it will be available solely on the big screen for 45 days before moving over to the Paramount+ streaming service.

In the runner-up spot was Disney’s Cruella, an origin story starring Emma Stone about the rise of 101 Dalmatians 's puppy-hating villain, Cruella de Vil. The PG-13-rated film also came out of the gate to solid numbers despite being available on Disney+ for an additional $30 fee. Cruella pulled in $21.3 million in the first three days of the long weekend, earning a $5,472 per-screen average in 3,892 locations. Its four-day gross is projected to hit $26.5 million. The film currently has a 72% score on RottenTomatoes and received a straight ‘A’ CinemaScore grade. One interesting footnote: female ticket buyers turned out to be a critical factor in the holiday weekend’s booming business, with women making up 53% of A Quiet Place Part II’s audience and 64% of Cruella’s.

In third place was Lionsgate’s horror flick Spiral, which took in just under $2.3 million over the weekend’s first three days in North America and an estimated $2.9 million for the four-day frame. The latest R-rated Saw installment saw its receipts fall off a steep -50.5% from the previous session while earning a $760 per-screen average in 2,991 theaters. Its three-week North American total now stands at $19.8 million. The ninth chapter in the splatter saga which kicked off in 2004 has tacked on an additional $6.8 million abroad to date, lifting its worldwide total to $27.2 million.

In fourth place was Jason Statham’s Wrath of Man. The United Artists’ action-thriller added $2.1 million domestically, which represented a -29.5% dip from the previous weekend (Its four-day projection is a little under $2.8 million). The R-rated film had a $698 per-screen average in 3,007 theaters. Its four-week North American total now sits at $22.1 million. However, Statham’s latest punch-‘em-up continues to translate well overseas, where it has accumulated $57.7 million in foreign markets, bringing the film’s combined worldwide gross to a hair under $80.5 million.

Rounding out the top five was Disney’s Raya and the Last Dragon. In its thirteenth (!) week, the PG-rated computer-animated adventure added just under $2 million domestically thanks to a +19.7% bump over the previous session (Its four-day projection is $2.6 million). Despite also being available on the Disney+ streaming platform for a $30 fee, the film had a $990 per-screen average in 2,015 theaters, bringing its domestic box-office total to $50.9 million. Overseas, Raya has racked up $77 million so far, pushing its current worldwide total to $128.5 million.

Meanwhile, the latest Fast and Furious sequel, F9, continues to burn rubber overseas. While the Vin Diesel-starrer will not cross the starting line on our shores until June 25, it has already zipped past the $200 million line in its first two weeks playing abroad. Its current international gross in just eight markets is a whopping $229 million and counting.

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'A Quiet Place Part II' Makes Serious Memorial Day Noise With A $48.4 Million Three-Day Bow; 'Cruella' Is Solid In Second With $21.3 Million - Box Office Mojo
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Timbaland & Swizz Beatz’ VERZUZ Rematch: Here’s What Happened - Pitchfork

Timbaland & Swizz Beatz’ VERZUZ Rematch: Here’s What Happened

The founders of the popular head-to-head series played songs by Aaliyah, DMX, Missy Elliott, JAY-Z, Beyoncé, Justin Timberlake, and more
Swizz Beatz Timbaland
Swizz Beatz & Timbaland (Manny Carabel/Getty Images)

Swizz Beatz & Timbaland reunited on VERZUZ for their first rematch tonight. Missy Elliott wished Swizz and Timbaland good luck in a brief video before the match. Their face-off included songs they worked on with Aaliyah, DMX, Missy Elliott, JAY-Z, Beyoncé, Justin Timberlake, Nicki Minaj, J. Cole, Drake, Lil Wayne, and more. Find the playlist below.

The two producers and VERZUZ founders sold the company to Triller in March, sharing portions of the equity in the new combined company with the artists who appeared in the series up through that point. Swizz Beatz recently oversaw the completion and release of the first posthumous DMX album Exodus.

Read about VERZUZ in Pitchfork’s list “How Music Persisted During the Pandemic.”

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Timbaland & Swizz Beatz’ VERZUZ Rematch: Here’s What Happened - Pitchfork
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'Mare of Easttown' Finale's Julianne Nicholson Breaks Down the Tragic Twist - Daily Beast

Over Mare of Easttown’s seven-episode run on HBO, its obsessed audience has transformed into amateur sleuths, putting a gumshoe’s fedora on their Twitter avatars as they piece together the crime thriller’s central mystery: Who killed Erin McMenamin?

A Google search of that very question yields dozens of blog posts and fan forums ranking the possible suspects. Now that Sunday night’s finale has aired, suffice it to say that the actual killer was likely a surprise to even the series’ most keen-eyed viewers, though one of the most popular theories surrounding the whodunnit was confirmed.

(Warning: Spoilers ahead from Sunday’s finale. Do not read further if you do not want to know what happened!)

As many Mare fans pointed out over the course of the series, you don’t cast Julianne Nicholson in the friend role if she’s not going to have some meaty material in the end. That was exactly the case for the actress, known for delivering shattering, emotionally brittle performances in films like August: Osage County and Black Mass.

First, it appears that Nicholson’s character Lori Ross, best friend of Kate Winslet’s titular detective Mare, shoulders the burden of the revelation that her husband, John Ross (Joe Tippett), is the father of Erin’s baby, DJ, and the one who killed her. But, in the kind of last-act twist that has your jaw successively dropping until it crashes through the floor, it turns out that Lori and John were covering for their young son, Ryan (Cameron).

After learning of John and Erin’s affair, Ryan stole a gun from a neighbor—the same neighbor who reported the “ferret stalker” in the show’s premiere (full circle!)—and confronted Erin. He meant to just scare her into leaving his family alone, but things got out of hand and he accidentally killed her.

That leads to a series of what may rank as some of the most heartbreaking TV scenes of the year, all at the hand of Nicholson’s acting, a steely face trembling over an open wound. There’s her reaction to Ryan storming into the house screaming, “It’s Mare! She knows!,” fired off like gunshots to the heart as Lori hurriedly envelopes him in her arms, inconsolable over the boy’s certain fate.

There’s the almost mafioso way she hisses at Mare in the interrogation room, practically shooting venom as she justified, “I agreed to lie to protect my son. And I would have taken that to my grave if you didn’t show up at the house today.” She breaks down in her car, screaming at Mare in disbelief, “My Ryan!” as she tries to console her, like a mother lion’s pained roar.

Then there are the quiet moments as Lori resigns to her new life—when John asks her to raise DJ as her own, when she takes DJ to get his ear surgery—emotionally flattened by the series of tragic events and with no other recourse but to morosely soldier on.

When we connect with Nicholson over Zoom to talk about the finale, we joke about how, when we last spoke in 2016 when she was starring on another slow-burn crime-mystery series, Eyewitness and told me, “I would love not cry at work,” joking about how serious her characters tend to be. “Sounds really nice.”

She laughs again when I bring it up this time. “Yesterday, somebody was like, do you ever want to do a comedy? I have to start saying no. No more grief.”

Still, as Sunday night’s Mare of Easttown finale proved, she’s really good at playing grief.

The series is the rare occasion in recent years of ratings and viewership growing week after week, with social media engagement doubling between episodes five and six. The show has become an obsession to the point that Saturday Night Live even parodied it. In the age of bingeing, people are breaking their habits and watching on a weekly basis, both to avoid spoilers and join the watercooler conversation.

We all together screamed over Evan Peters’ Detective Zabel (first his drunk acting, then his shocking death), raved over Kate Winslet’s performance, been amused by the ludicrous “Delco accent,” celebrated the Jean Smartaissance, and had a collective heart attack while watching Carrie (Sosie Bacon) fall asleep while little Drew was facedown in the bathtub.

The show had thoughtfully and deliberately scattered puzzle pieces across different episodes—from the “ferret stalker” to the significance of Freddie Hanlon’s addiction to the specific kind of gun used to kill Erin—and now, they finally fit together.

So we talked to Nicholson about everything: Her reaction to who did it, dealing with Lori’s grief as a mother herself, and the fact that the show’s costume designer camped out at a Wawa, spending hours taking photos of people as references for the show’s characters’ wardrobes.

The internet has been playing a “Who killed Erin?” sleuthing game throughout this entire series. Did you have your own journey with that? I’m curious how much you knew going into this.

Kate called me and said, “I'm doing a show. The part is my best friend. You have to do it. I'm sending you episodes one through six.” So they sent them and I read those. Like the audience, I thought with every episode that I knew who did it—and then it would be revealed that I did not know who did it. (Laughs) It wasn't until we knew that I was doing the job that I was sent episode seven. I was surprised! Were you surprised?

So here’s the thing: I am not alone in thinking that the killer was going to be connected to Lori somehow, the reasoning being that you were cast in that role and you don't cast you in that role if there's not going to be some sort of emotional climax. Beyond that I just assumed it was John, and that was going to be it. I didn’t expect that last twist.

OK good. Me too. Then when I was reading it I was like, oh no is Lori going to be the killer? I had already agreed to do it at that time and I was like, I don't want to kill a teenage girl! I was sort of relieved when it was my son.

What was your reaction to it being Lori’s son?

Oh god, it's terrible. The idea of it being all John's fault, and for something like that to happen, it's tragic. That scene where she goes to visit him later with her daughter and the baby, it's just so awful to think that is where he is now. That informs every day from then on. Every day starts with that, knowing where her son is.

Throughout the whole series, Lori seems like someone who is just so worn down, like she’s exhausted from shouldering the weight of so much. The finale piles that on even more, but there is something really recognizable about a mother and a wife who is carrying a lot.

Like the audience, I thought with every episode that I knew who did it—and then it would be revealed that I did not know who did it. I was surprised! Were you surprised?

Obviously these are extreme examples of what's going on with these characters' lives. But I think it's not uncommon for, in particular, moms to be taking it on and just still getting it done and making sure that everything's okay for everyone around them. It felt like an honest depiction of a woman who lives in that place, in that social standing and in that community. It felt pretty honest to those places.

Everything about her was so recognizable, down to her wardrobe, the baggy t-shirts and sweats.

I loved the wardrobe. I thought Meghan Kasperlik, our costume designer, did such a great job. She would always bring in these really specific choices for Lori. There were even details like I felt like she should wear a sports bra under that shirt. There's certain things that are just, like, it's comfort. You know? It's just a particular style. Our costume designer would spend hours at Wawa, just sort of like blindly snapping pics of people for reference. Then she’d go to stores and find versions of that, which was great and I think really informs the believability of the characters.

I don't know if it exists anymore, but there used to be a site called People of Walmart. People would send in photos of people at Walmart in embarrassing outfits.

People of Wawa!

I wanted to talk to you about some specific scenes from the finale. I was struck by the one at the courthouse, where John asks Lori to take DJ in and raise him. It’s the kind of thing that could have been this whole big, explosive scene. But you played it silently.

If I'm not mistaken, I think Lori originally had a line or two there. One of the things I loved about Brad [Ingelsby, the creator] was that he was always there to say if you don't want to say that, if you think of something better, or if you don't want to say anything, then great. So the scene when John tells Lori at the table, I said I don't think she says anything. And with the courthouse too. I feel like it's expected in a television show to have that dramatic moment but, in life, what's going to happen when someone asks you that? It's going to take a minute. You don't know what that feeling is going to be or what that response is going to be. So they were open to that and they thought that could work. Sometimes it's more interesting to see that person have the experience than hear them tell you about it.

The scene where Lori takes DJ to get his ear surgery is also fascinating. We’ve spent seven episodes waiting for this poor child to get his surgery, so it should be a triumphant moment. But Lori is so despondent, and the situation she’s in is so tragic.

That was one of the things that we talked about before filming, because the question of her taking that child is, like, not everyone would. Right? And if you do, that's not as simple yes. And I bet the feelings around that change day to day, hour to hour. But it's only a little baby. And he's the half brother of your other two children, but like, this is where he comes from. So it's just so layered.

I can’t stop thinking about the future of these characters. We see how intertwined this community is, and now everyone knows that Lori is raising the illegitimate child of her husband whose mother was killed by her son.

I know! I know. She should move to South Beach and yuk it up.

That's the thing about those communities, though. The people never move.

I know, yeah. She's not going anywhere.

Lori tells Mare, “I agreed to lie to protect my son.” As a mother yourself, what did you think of her decision to cover up for him?

I would have done the same thing. Also because it's John's fault and he'll take the blame. I mean, you don't want to pick apart my answer...it's not foolproof, this plan. But it all happened because of John, and he's happy to take the rap for it. It was an accident on Ryan's behalf. It should have never happened. But if John's willing to serve the punishment, then I would be fine with that. Let the kid live his life not in jail. Going to visit him in that place was awful. When she asked him, “Are you making any new friends?” It's just like such a terrible thing to imagine.

Awful because you were thinking about what if this was your own family?

Yeah. I thought about that a lot. My son is very close in age to Ryan on the show and has a similar personality. Just nice kids. Thinking about a life being taken away in that way, to someone who that shouldn't have happened to, it's just terrible. It’s too much.

The scene where he runs into the house screaming that Mare is coming and you just hold him...that, like, broke me.

That was really hard too. The age that Cameron [who plays Ryan] was and that our son is too, it's like the sweet spot where they're not children. They're not little kids, but they are still a little bit. They’ve got one foot in teen and one foot in kid, so they still want to, you know, sit on your lap. They still want to cuddle. It's this funny place. I just felt very easy with Cameron. He's also such a nice kid. We went out for dinner and we would hang out on set and he would tell me about his basketball games and his mom was great. So it was just a terrible thing to imagine.

You’ve done crime shows before on television. What do you think it is about this one that’s connected in the way that it’s become such an obsession?

I like to think that it's the interest of the specificity of the place. Like Delco in particular, where I can't really bring to mind another story from there. So it's sort of peeping into a place we don't know, and a community we don't know. All of our intention was to create those people and those relationships as the foundation, and that hopefully was the interesting thing about the show before you add the crime. I think it's great that it's all these women: Mare and her mom and her daughter, Lori and the whole basketball team. Maybe something people are responding to, hopefully.

It’s interesting that for all the obsession over who was the killer and the online odds rankings and guessing and all that, the series ends on the theme of how a community deals with pain and grief. It doesn’t end when the mystery is solved. It ends with Mare trying to heal after her son’s suicide.

Yes. Come for the crime, stay for the grace.

The casting aspect of all that online sleuthing was interesting. Just as people assumed Lori was connected somehow because you were cast in the role, people couldn’t let go of the idea that Guy Pearce also must have something to do with it. But he really was just the nice love interest.

Sometimes you don't want to be murderers and mothers of dead kids. Sometimes we just want to be people at a bar, having a beer, writing a book.

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'Mare of Easttown' Finale's Julianne Nicholson Breaks Down the Tragic Twist - Daily Beast
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John Krasinski Reacts After Amy Schumer Jokes He and Emily Blunt Have a "Marriage for Publicity" - E! Online

Amy Schumer has an unusual perspective on John Krasinski and Emily Blunt's marriage. 

The 39-year-old comedian took to Instagram on Sunday, May 30 to post an image from the new film A Quiet Place Part II and encourage fans to head to a movie theater to check it out. In her caption, she joked about the A-list couple's relationship, given that John directed Emily in the horror movie. 

"I loved every second of @aquietplacemovie even better than the first one which blew me away," Amy wrote. "Amazing to be in a movie theater!! [popcorn emoji]"

She continued, "and although Ive said for a long time I think Emily and John have a pretend marriage for publicity. But I still think you should see it this rainy weekend."

Among those commenting on the lighthearted post was John himself, who replied, "Thank you Amy!... for blowing up our whole marriage spot." 

Not only did the 41-year-old Jack Ryan actor prove he has a good sense of humor about Amy's remark, but he can also take solace in knowing he wasn't the only target of her recent quips.

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John Krasinski Reacts After Amy Schumer Jokes He and Emily Blunt Have a "Marriage for Publicity" - E! Online
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‘Tarzan’ actor Joe Lara killed in plane crash - New York Daily News

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‘Tarzan’ actor Joe Lara killed in plane crash - New York Daily News
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Emma Stone Explains Why She Didn't Carry Cruella's Signature Cigarette Holder - Cosmopolitan

As any fan of 101 Dalmatians is well aware, there are several things that make Cruella de Vil iconic: her black-and-white hair, her personal style, and her signature cigarette holder—complete with a swirl of toxic yellow smoke. But fans were quick to notice that the accessory was missing from Disney's new villain origin story, Cruella, and Emma Stone went ahead and explained why.

“That is not allowed in 2021,” she told New York Times. “We are not allowed to smoke onscreen in a Disney film. It was difficult to not have that cigarette holder…I was so excited to have that green plume of smoke in there, but it was not possible."

She added, "I don’t want to promote smoking, but I’m also not trying to promote skinning puppies.”

According to Just Jared, Disney banned smoking in its films around 2007, and the ban now encompasses Lucasfilm, Marvel, and Pixar.

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P.S. Emma also noted in the interview that "We don’t quite get to a place where this woman is skinning puppies, but there is an exploration of what it means to be 'bad' and what the difference is between that and being rebellious and thinking differently than everyone around you."

Kay, BRB while I listen to this on repeat:

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STREAM CRUELLA


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Emma Stone Explains Why She Didn't Carry Cruella's Signature Cigarette Holder - Cosmopolitan
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'A Quiet Place Part II' Gets Loud And Breaks Pandemic Box-Office Record - HuffPost

There’s no tip-toeing around it: “A Quiet Place Part II” opened with a bang at the box office, grossing a pandemic-best haul of $48 million over the holiday weekend, which saw moviegoers return to theaters in droves. 

The sequel to John Krasinski’s hit 2018 horror flick exceeded expectations to become the biggest domestic debut of a film released during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and is projected take in $58.5 million through Memorial Day on Monday, according to the film’s studio, Paramount.

“A Quiet Place Part II,” which stars a shotgun-wielding Emily Blunt as a woman who leads her family through a post-apocalyptic world infested with monsters, was forecast to open in the $40 million range, given the number of theaters across the country that are still shuttered or operating at a limited capacity. 

But the sequel has nearly bested the $50 million opening of the first film, which went on to earn $340 million worldwide, and has been viewed at 3,726 theaters currently playing the film across the country. 

The film now stands as the pandemic box-office king, easily toppling “Godzilla vs. Kong,” which pulled in $30 million over it’s three-day opening weekend and was simultaneously released on HBO Max as part of the streaming service’s much-contested deal with Warner Bros.

As this weekend’s sole release exclusively in theaters, “A Quiet Place Part II” is the biggest blockbuster to debut only on the big screen since “Tenet” opened back in September 2020. Many had hoped the Christopher Nolan-directed film would revitalize the struggling cinema industry at the time, but it went on to become one of the most high-profile, pandemic-era box-office bombs.

Disney’s “Cruella” also managed to pull in some promising numbers. The live-action reimagining of the iconic villain starring Emma Stone is expected to bring in an estimated $26.5 million over the four-day holiday weekend, despite the film also being made available for subscribers of the studio’s streaming service.

“A Quiet Place Part II” was initially set to be released in March of last year before the pandemic upended the entertainment industry, and the film bounced around Paramount’s release schedule. When the sequel was first postponed, Krasinski said he’d rather delay the film indefinitely than not have people experience it together in the theater.

“One of the things I’m most proud of is that people have said our movie is one you have to see all together,” he said in a social media statement at the time. “Well due to the ever-changing circumstances of what’s not going on around us now is clearly not the right time to do that. As insanely excited as we all are for you to see this movie, I’m going to wait to release the film until we can all see it together. So here’s to our group movie date. See you soon!”

But fans will be able to watch the sequel at home before too long, as “A Quiet Place Part II” will soon head to the studio’s steaming service, Paramount+, after a 45-day theatrical release window.

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'A Quiet Place Part II' Gets Loud And Breaks Pandemic Box-Office Record - HuffPost
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Sunday, May 30, 2021

Gavin MacLeod, ‘Mary Tyler Moore Show’ and ‘The Love Boat’ Actor, Dead at 90 - Rolling Stone

Gavin MacLeod, the actor who starred on the classic sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show and captained The Love Boat, has died at the age of 90.

MacLeod’s nephew Mark See confirmed the actor’s May 29th death to Variety. While no cause of death was provided, See noted that MacLeod’s health had declined in recent months.

Ed Asner, MacLeod’s castmate on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, tweeted following news of the actor’s death, “My heart is broken. Gavin was my brother, my partner in crime (and food) and my comic conspirator. I will see you in a bit Gavin. Tell the gang I will see them in a bit. Betty [White]! It’s just you and me now.” The cast of the legendary sitcom also included Moore, Valerie Harper and Cloris Leachman, who have all died within the past five years; Leachman died in January 2021.

Born Allen See in Mount Kisco, New York on February 28th, 1931 — he changed his “confusing” name at the behest of an acting coach, he wrote in his memoir This Is Your Captain Speaking — MacLeod studied acting at Ithaca College, graduating in 1952.

After making his TV debut with a small role on a 1957 episode of The Walter Winchell Files, MacLeod accrued bit parts in movies and on television shows throughout the late Fifties before landing a guest spot on The Dick Van Dyke Show in 1961 — his first time working with Moore — and his first significant TV role on the sitcom McHale’s Navy. After playing Seaman Joseph Haines on over 70 episodes, MacLeod would eventually that sitcom in order to appear alongside Steve McQueen in the 1966 war film The Sand Pebbles.

In 1970, MacLeod was cast as news writer Murray Slaughter on The Mary Tyler Moore Show; he first auditioned for the role of producer Lou Grant, which went to Asner. MacLeod appeared on all 168 episodes of the acclaimed sitcom’s seven-season run and, almost immediately following the show’s conclusion in 1977, landed a role that would keep him on television consistently for another decade: Captain Merrill Stubing on The Love Boat.

Following that series’ nine-season (plus television movies) run, MacLeod continued to be a fixture on television, appearing on multiple episodes of The King of Queens and That 70’s Show, as well as guest spots on Oz, JAG and Murder, She Wrote.

Asner paid tribute to MacLeod Saturday in an interview with Variety. “He made everything easy,” he said of his former co-star. “He was a lovely soul who will make heaven brighter.”

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Gavin MacLeod, ‘Mary Tyler Moore Show’ and ‘The Love Boat’ Actor, Dead at 90 - Rolling Stone
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The Opening Weekend for ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ Will Best Entire Box Office of ‘Tenet’ - IndieWire

Those who placed bets on John Krasinski as the savior of movie theaters, collect your winnings. While you’re at it, tip your hat to Paramount. “A Quiet Place Part II,” similar to its predecessor directed by and starring Krasinski, finally was released more than 14 months after its original date. One of the earliest titles to be jettisoned after the onset of COVID-19, it was ultimately placed this weekend after Universal vacated “F9” for June 25.

Paramount — along with Disney, which saw “Cruella” open to an initial $21.3 million — gambled that theaters would be ready  to approximate the business they hoped for last year. That’s happened, even with a 45-day theatrical window (for “A Quiet Place Part II;” “Cruella,” of course, is now available to Disney+ subscribers with a $29.95  surcharge).

The result is a three-day estimate  for “A Quiet Place Part II” of $48.4 million. With Memorial Day added, the four-day guess is $58.5 million. With the exception of “Godzilla vs. Kong,” that’s better than the full grosses any film in the last 15 months, including “Tenet” and “The Croods: A New Age.”

There’s logic to that: Most top theaters in the U.S. are now open. “Quiet” opened in about 700 more theaters than “Godzilla.” The last two months have seen a surge in confidence about safety in group activities. Even if operating at a loss, exhibition has done a terrific job in establishing that they are being responsible while getting back in business.

Paramount and Disney built on the work others have done, going back to Warner Bros. and Christopher Nolan over Labor Day. Warners followed with a strong lineup of films (playing day-and-date HBO Max); Universal has also stuck with theatrical releases with a three-week window before Premium VOD.

With “A Quiet Place Part II” expected to make $58.5 million for four days, it compares to the $48.1 million “Godzilla” made in its first five days with a Wednesday opening. Even more impressive is in March 2020, advance tracking for “A Quiet Place Part II” projected the opening gross at $60 million for its original three-day opening.

To extend that comparison: $48 million for the first three days is 80 percent of the original estimate. If that paralleled the theaters’ overall performance, that would be at the high level of optimistic.

Cruella

“Cruella”

Disney

“Cruella,” similar to Disney’s “Raya and the Last Dragon,” opened with same-day PVOD availability for Disney+ subscribers. The earlier animated release opened to $8.5 million with 2,045 theaters. “Cruella” has 3,892, clearly advancing its cause.

“Raya” is nearing $50 million in total gross and is still #5 in its 13th weekend. That leads to the likelihood “Cruella” will also have a strong multiple (its A Cinemascore a great sign). Even if “Cruella” were theater exclusive, “Quiet” likely would have led the weekend easily. A sequel to a popular title that appeals to a wider swath of moviegoers who chase opening weekends would give it the edge.

“Cruella” represented more than a quarter of the total weekend gross of over $80 million (“Quiet” took around 60 percent). Some context: The three-day total for Memorial Day weekends 2017-2019 each took in each about $180 million. The four-day take for “Quiet” would place it at #21 overall, without adjusting for inflation.

“Dream Horse”

With the holdovers, normalcy reigned. Two strong new titles meant less business for the rest, with most holdovers seeing significant drops. There were exceptions: “Raya,” helped in part by drive-in play with “Cruella,” saw a 20 percent rise. Bleecker Street’s “Dream Horse” otherwise held best, with an 18 percent drop.

The other debut of note is “Bo Gia” (Dad, I’m Sorry), a Vietnamese film that played in 19 theaters with a gross of around $250,000. That’s over $13,000 per theater for the three days. This placed it #12 overall, impressive for a national cinema that previously went untapped for domestic audiences.

The Top 10

1. A Quiet Place Part II (Paramount) NEW – Cinemascore: A-; Metacritic: 71; Est. budget: $61 million

$48,385,000 in 3,726 theaters; PTA (per theater average): $12,986; Cumulative: $48,385,000

2. Cruella (Disney) NEW – Cinemascore: A; Metacritic: 60; Est. budget: $100 million; Also available on Premium VOD at Disney+

$21,300,000 in 3,892 theaters; PTA: $5,473; Cumulative: $21,300,000

3. Spiral (Lionsgate) Week 3; Last weekend #2

$2,275,000 (-50%) in 2,641 theaters (-350); PTA: $861; Cumulative: $19,782,000

4. Wrath of Man (MGM) Week 4; Last weekend #2; also available on Premium Video on Demand

$(est.) 2,000,000 (-33%) in 2,607 theaters (-40); PTA: $767; Cumulative: $(est.) 22,000,000

5. Raya and the Last Dragon (Disney) Week 13; Last weekend #4; also available on Premium VOD

$1,995,000 (+20%) in 2,015 theaters (-400); PTA: $990; Cumulative: $51,435,000

6. Godzilla vs. Kong (Warner Bros.) Week 9; Last weekend #5

$852,000 (-39%) in 1,815 theaters (-737); PTA: $469; Cumulative: $98,302,000

7. Demon Slayer Kimetsu no Yaiba – The Movie: Mugen Train (Funimation) Week 6; Last weekend #4

$(est.) 830,000 (-35%) in 1,145 theaters (-655); PTA: $725; Cumulative: $(est.) 45,175,000

8. Dream Horse (Bleecker Street) Week 2; Last weekend #9

$652,373 (-18%) in 1,283 theaters (+29); PTA: $508; Cumulative: $1,903,000

9. Those Who Wish Me Dead (Warner Bros.) Week 3; Last weekend #3; also available on HBO Max

$545,000 (-72%) in 1,805 theaters (-1,574); PTA: $302; Cumulative: $6,821,000

10. World War Z (Paramount) REISSUE

$(est.) 357,000 in 72 theaters; PTA: $4,958; Cumulative: $(adjusted) 225,700,000

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The Opening Weekend for ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ Will Best Entire Box Office of ‘Tenet’ - IndieWire
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Richard Belzer, Extraordinarily Smart-Ass as a Comic and a TV Cop, Dies at 78 - Hollywood Reporter

Richard Belzer, the beloved comedian who began as an edgy stand-up performer before finding further fame as the cynical but stalwart detect...