Quentin Tarantino takes box office silver behind The Lion King
- Published
Quentin Tarantino's latest film Once Upon A Time in Hollywood has given the maverick filmmaker his biggest opening weekend at the US box office.
Its $40m (£32.4m) nudges it ahead of 2009's Inglourious Basterds' $38m (£31m) debut and Django Unchained's $30m (£24.3m) opening in 2012.
The new film, set in 1969 around the time of the Manson murders, stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt.
The Lion King retained top position with $75.5m (£61m) in its second week.
The photo-realistic re-versioning of the 1994 Disney classic, starring a vocal cast which includes Beyonce, Donald Glover and British actor Chiwetel Ejiofor, has now taken $350m (£284m) at the North America box office and $963m (£780m) globally.
Tarantino's movie outperformed expectations of $30m in takings, despite a more audience restrictive R-rating.
It scored an opening day record for the director, taking $16.8m (£14m) on Friday.
Once Upon A Time in Hollywood has an 85 rating on Metacritic, external and has been largely well-received by critics.
Empire gave it four stars, external, while the Guardian heaped praise on the film, external, giving it five out of five.
Time magazine, external described the film as "one of Tarantino's best".
It is Tarantino's first made outside of the Weinstein Company or its predecessor Miramax and is one of his most expensive films to make, costing a reported $90m.
It follows DiCaprio and Pitt as an ageing actor and his long-time stunt double while Margot Robbie stars as Sharon Tate, one of the Manson Family's victims.
Tarantino's Django Unchained is still - to date - his highest grossing film internationally.
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- Published22 May 2019
- Published23 May 2019