It’s all WONKA, driving Moviegoers to the Box Office this weekend with $35 million from 4,203 theatres. This latest take on the famtastical Chocolatier with star TimothĂ©e Chalamet doing promoting around the world including a stop in Toronto this week, gets 85% on the Tomatometer.
THE HUNGER GAMES: THE BALLAD OF SONGBIRDS & SNAKES is a distant second with $6 million from 3,291 theatres for Lionsgate/Cineplex Pictures taking it to $145 million domestically.
THE BOY AND THE HERON is third with $4.5 million, taking it to $22.3 million in its second weekend for GKIDS and Cineplex Pictures.
Fourth goes to GODZILLA MINUS ONE with $4.4 million from 2,622 theatres for Toho, a total $33.7 million grossed in North America. This is a huge feat for Japanese Cinema, boasting two films in the Top Five this weekend.
TROLLS BAND TOGETHER rounds the Top Five out with $4 million, taking it to $88 million for Universal Pictures.
TIFF ’23 opening night selection THE BOY AND THE HERON leads a slow weekend at the Box Office with $10.7 million from 2,100 theatres for GKIDS and Cineplex Pictures. The latest from Anime legend Hayao Miyazaki gets 95% on the Tomatometer.
Second is THE HUNGER GAMES: THE BALLAD OF SONGBIRDS & SNAKES is second with $8.7 million, a total $134.9 million for Lionsgate and Cineplex Pictures.
Landing in third is GODZILLA MINUS ONE with $6.4 million, a total of $23.4 million over two weekends for Toho International.
TROLLS BAND TOGETHER takes fourth with $6 million, a total $82 million for Universal Pictures domestically.
Rounding it all out is RENAISSANCE: A FILM BY BEYONCĂ, last week’s champ, coming in with $5.2 million for AMC/Cineplex Pictures.
A young boy named Mahito yearning for his mother ventures into a world shared by the living and the dead. There, death comes to an end, and life finds a new beginning. A semi-autobiographical fantasy about life, death, and creation, in tribute to friendship, from the mind of Hayao Miyazaki.
Original Story and Screenplay Written and Directed By: Hayao Miyazaki
Produced by: Toshio Suzuki
Executive Produced by: Koji Hoshino, Goro Miyazaki, Kiyofumi Nakajima
Production: Studio Ghibli
Music: Joe Hisaishi
Theme Song: âSpinning Globeâ, Lyrics, Music and Performed by Kenshi Yonezu
Supervising Animator: Takeshi Honda
Art Director: Yoji Takeshige
Japanese Cast: Soma Santoki, Masaki Suda, Ko Shibasaki, AIMYON, Yoshino Kimura, Takuya Kimura, Keiko Takeshita, Jun Fubuki, Sawako Agawa, Karen Takizawa, Shinobu Otake, Jun Kunimura, Kaoru Kobayashi, Shohei Hino
English Cast: Christian Bale, Dave Bautista, Gemma Chan, Willem Dafoe, Karen Fukuhara, Mark Hamill, Robert Pattinson, Florence Pugh, Luca Padovan, Mamoudou Athie, Tony Revolori, Dan Stevens
About Cineplex Pictures
Cineplex Pictures, a division of Cineplex, is a distributor of a wide range of genre films. Recent titles include The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, SAW X, EXPEND4BLES, Joy Ride, The Blackening, About My Father, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, Sisu, John Wick: Chapter 4, Jesus Revolution, Plane, The Good House, The Tragedy of Macbeth, Hotel Artemis, and Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero.
By David Baldwin
World War II has broken out and a young boy has moved with his family to the Japanese countryside. He encounters a heron, who is more persistent and radically different than other birds in terms of getting attention. After the heron leads the boy to an abandoned tower, it becomes clear that everything is not as it seems.
THE BOY AND THE HERON, Writer/Director Hayao Miyazakiâs first film in ten years, is a monumental achievement. Much like the beloved Studio Ghibli films that came before it, the film is a sumptuous visual feast that challenges your notions of what is possible within the medium. The staggering level of detail in each scene is magnificent, as are the effects used for water and fire. Suffice to say, it is a work of art that only a master like Miyazaki could make and we have been missing his influence for the last decade. If this is his last film (or second last film as we have been hearing in the past few days), then this culmination of such a rich career would be a good one to go out on.
My gripe, or at least what holds me back from loving THE BOY AND THE HERON rather than just liking it, is where the film goes in its back half. From the jump, it is a beautiful story about love, loss, grief and acceptance, and those themes imbue every frame with sadness and wonder. When the Film hits its Third Act, it throws all of that out and becomes something a bit more unwieldy (read: Miyazaki embracing the strange and metaphysical, alongside many, many parakeets). It feels choppy and unrefined â which is ironic because of how incredible the visuals are â and lost me more than once as it plays out. The breezy running time does not help get the film over the finish line any quicker either.
For Miyazaki fans, that sentiment will not mean as much as it does that the masterful filmmaker has delivered an unexpected, visually stunning gift for the ages. Each frame is a literal work of art and I doubt we will see another film as beautiful as this by the end of the year.
THE BOY AND THE HERON screens at TIFF â23:
Thursday, September 7 at 6:00 PM at Princess of Wales Theatre
Thursday, September 7 @ 8:00 PM at Roy Thomson Hall
Saturday, September 9 @ 10:30 AM at Roy Thomson Hall
Sunday, September 10 at 12:05 PM at Scotiabank Theatre Toronto
Friday, September 15 at 8:55 AM at Scotiabank Theatre Toronto
Saturday, September 16 at 5:50 PM at TIFF Bell Lightbox
TIFF is thrilled to announce that Studio Ghibliâs long-awaited fantastical epic feature film, The Boy and the Heron, from Academy Awardâwinning visionary director Hayao Miyazaki, will be the Opening Night Gala Presentation for the 48th Toronto International Film FestivalÂź on Thursday, September 7, at Roy Thomson Hall. The original story was written and directed by the Japanese filmmaker and produced by OscarÂź-winning Studio Ghibli, which Miyazaki co-founded.
While several of Studio Ghibliâs films have screened at TIFF, including The Red Turtle (2016), The Tale of The Princess Kaguya (2014), The Wind Rises (2013), From Up on Poppy Hill (2011), Spirited Away (2002), and Princess Mononoke (1999), this is the first time a Japanese film or an animated film has opened the Festival.
âWe are honoured to open the 48th Toronto International Film Festival with the work of one of cinemaâs greatest artists,â said Cameron Bailey, CEO, TIFF. âAlready acclaimed as a masterpiece in Japan, Hayao Miyazakiâs new film begins as a simple story of loss and love and rises to a staggering work of imagination. I look forward to our audience discovering its mysteries for themselves, but I can promise a singular, transformative experience.â
This announcement comes on the heels of TIFFâs recent showcase and audience favourite, POP Japan, celebrating the convergence of the cult, pulp, and popular in Japanese film and art, in which Miyazakiâs seminal films and most lauded classics, My Neighbor Totoro and Spirited Away, were also featured.
The Boy and the Heron opened to record-breaking success in Japan. The hand-drawn, animated feature â director Miyazakiâs first feature film in 10 years â features a musical score from Miyazakiâs long-time collaborator Joe Hisaishi. In an extraordinary break with tradition, Studio Ghibli released the film in Japan without any promotion, marketing materials, or film description, allowing audiences to discover the film for themselves. This screening will be the International Premiere and the first opportunity for audiences outside of Japan to experience the film for themselves. GKIDS is distributing The Boy and the Heron in North America, where it will be released in theatres later in the year.
For advertising opportunites please contact mrwill@mrwillwong.com