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Crazy Rich Asians
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From left, Steven Yeun, Jae Suh Park, Randall Park, Daniel Dae Kim and Henry Golding attending the premiere of Warner Bros. Pictures' Crazy Rich Asians at TCL Chinese Theatre IMAX in Hollywood, California, this month. Photo: Getty Images

Crazy Rich Asians shines bright at the North American box office

Warner Bros. estimates that the film earned $25.2 million over the weekend and $34 million since its opening on Wednesday

Glitz won over guns as the gilded romance Crazy Rich Asians debuted at No. 1 in North American theatres this weekend, surpassing industry expectations and beating out action-packed fare like Mile 22.

Warner Bros. estimates that the film earned $25.2 million over the weekend and $34 million since its opening on Wednesday. It is a sure-fire win for the film, which cost $30 million to produce and went into the weekend with months of buzz and a 93 per cent “fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Breakout star Henry Golding said on Sunday that the film’s performance is a “testament to the people who are turning up”.

Constance Wu in a scene from the film Crazy Rich Asians. Photo: Warner Bros. Entertainment via AP

“It’s not just the Asians who are coming. It’s people of all colours from all walks of life who are enjoying this cinematic experience,” Golding said. “It’s a real shift in Hollywood.”

Adapted from Kevin Kwan’s bestseller, Crazy Rich Asians stars Constance Wu as an American woman who gets a culture shock meeting her boyfriend’s obscenely wealthy family in Singapore.

The studio strategically bumped up the film’s opening to a Wednesday earlier in the summer.

“We knew we’d get avids who read the book and a large Asian following,” said Warner Bros. domestic distribution president Jeff Goldstein.

“We figured OK, we get good reviews, open on Wednesday, word of mouth will spread and really propel the movie into the weekend, and that’s exactly what happened.”

As recently as July 26, box office experts were predicting that the film would open to at least $18 million over its first five days, but no one expected a launch of over $30 million.

“I think the audience isn’t an obvious audience,” Goldstein said. “When you get a culturally important event like this movie, I think it just takes off like wildfire.”

The stakes were high for the first studio-produced movie led by Asian-Americans in 25 years. The filmmakers even turned down a big offer from Netflix to give the historically significant film a theatrical platform.

Constance Wu, left, and Michelle Yeoh in a scene from the film Crazy Rich Asians. Photo: Warner Bros. Entertainment via AP

Cast members and fans started using the hashtag #GoldOpen to try to encourage more opening weekend support.

Director Jon M. Chu tweeted his appreciation on Sunday and asked audiences to keep spreading the word.

“We still have a long run to go but our message to the world has been heard. We have arrived,” Chu wrote. “Now let’s go tell more of our stories! We have a lot more to say. And I don’t want to wait another 25 years to see them. This is only the beginning.”

Despite the success of Crazy Rich Asians, other films still found audiences this weekend, including Warner Bros. shark movie The Meg, which fell only 53 per cent in its second weekend, adding $21.2 million. The Jason Statham-led film has now grossed over $300 million worldwide.

Mark Wahlberg’s action-packed Mile 22, his fourth collaboration with director Peter Berg, debuted in third place with an estimated $13.6 million. The STX film had a $35 million production budget.

Hollywood’s winning streak continues with the summer season up 12.4 per cent from last year and the year overall up 8.9 per cent.

“The box office is on a roll,” said comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

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