Barbie field workplace day 4 assortment: Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling movie drops to ₹2.5 crore on Monday

Barbie field workplace: The Greta Gerwig movie starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling as Barbie and Ken respectively slowed down on its first Monday. According to a report on Sacnilk.com, the movie dropped to round 2.5 crore on day 4, as per early estimates. Also learn: Juhi Parmar pens open letter to Barbie for ‘inappropriate language, sexual connotations,’ internet says she’s ignorant

Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling (right) in a still from Barbie.
Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling (right) in a still from Barbie.

Barbie released alongside Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, which is on an entirely different subject – a dark biopic of the father of the atomic bomb. Barbie is the first ever live-action Barbie film that brings the famous fashion doll alive on screen. The film follows Barbie and Ken on a journey of self-discovery following an existential crisis. The film also features an ensemble cast that includes America Ferrera, Kate McKinnon, Issa Rae, Rhea Perlman, and Will Ferrell.

Barbie collection

As per Sacnilk.com, Barbie had opened at 5 crore and showed growth of about 30 percent on Saturday with a collection of 6.5 crore. It further rose to 7.15 crore on Sunday but fell to just 2.5 crore on Monday. The film now stands at an estimated total of 21.15 crore.

Barbenheimer is a success

The simultaneous release of Barbie and Oppenheimer became a global trend named Barbenheimer as both the movies continue to make records at the box office.

Richard Gelfond, IMAX chief executive, said, “I’ve at all times joked that if there’s a twister film that works that the subsequent 12 months there shall be three twister films. There’s an inside prejudice to doing what works. I’m hopeful that these films have been unique by famous filmmakers will persuade studios to lean into that path quite than doing what’s secure. The numbers don’t lie.”

According to AP, within the wake of Barbenheimer, many are hoping Hollywood will draw a lesson apart from greenlighting extra toy variations and the inevitable Barbie sequel.

Clare Binns, managing director of indie distributor Picturehouse, wrote on Twitter, “Everyone got here out this weekend for 2 ORIGINAL, sensible, high quality films. It’s what audiences need. Reboots, superheroes and movies with bloated budgets that usually cowl a scarcity of concepts — time to take inventory. No algorithms this weekend.”

Source web site: www.hindustantimes.com

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