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Sony’s first R-rated comic book movie Kraven the Hunter bombed in its domestic box office debut, hunting down only $11 million to come in third behind Thanksgiving blockbusters Moana 2 and Wicked.

Kraven supplanted Madame Web to rank as the worst start ever for a Sony-produced Marvel comic book movie (the studio has rights to the Spider-Man universe), and one of the worst for any pic based on a Marvel character, not adjusted for inflation.

Reviewers ravaged the film, while audiences slapped it with a C CinemaScore. The pic also missed its target overseas, grossing a mere $15 million from 60 markets for a global debut of $26 million.

Kraven, starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson as the titular antihero, wasn’t cheap, costing $110 million to make instead of an intended $90 million because of pandemic and strike-related delays. Its release date was also pushed several times. Russell Crowe, Ariana DeBose, Fred Hechinger and Alessandro Nivola co-star in J.C. Chandor’s action-thriller about the vigilante son of a Russian gangster who has incredible strength.

Kraven is more bad news for Sony following Madame Web as it tries to mine the hundreds of Spider-Man-related characters it has the rights to. Sony insiders have marketed the film as an R-rated action pic akin to such titles as John Wick, versus a comic book movie.

'Kraven the Hunter' Bombs With $11M Opening

The weekend’s other new major studio release, The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim, is looking at a fifth or sixth place with around $5 million. The Warner Bros. and New Line animated feature takes place far before the events of Lord of the Rings. The movie earned a B CinemaScore. It took in $4 million at the international box office for a foreign total of $5.7 million and $10.3 million globally.

Elsewhere, Moana 2 and Wicked continued to save the day and top the domestic chart.

Disney Animation’s Moana sequel sped past the $700 million mark globally as it heads for the $1 billion mark. Domestically, it stayed number one in its third weekend with $26.6 million for a domestic tally of $337.5 million and north of $717 million globally.

Wicked sang past the $500 million mark in worldwide ticket sales in its fourth weekend, including earning another $22.5 million domestically.

Thanksgiving release Gladiator II placed fourth in North America with another $7.8 million for a domestic tally of $146 million. Overall, weekend revenue was up 16 percent over the same frame last year thanks to the strength this year’s trio of Thanksgiving tentpoles.

'Kraven the Hunter' Bombs With $11M Opening

Globally, the Gladiator sequel is celebrating nearing the $400 million mark. The movie has earned a hefty $252.6 million internationally for worldwide cume of $398.5 million through Sunday.

Other weekend highlights: the rerelease of Christopher Nolan and Paramount’s Interstellar in 321 Imax locations came in seventh with $3.3 million.

And at the awards box office, A24’s Queer cracked the top 10 with $791,000 as the specialty pic expanded into a total of 460 cinemas for a early domestic tally of $1.9 million. Amazon MGM Studios’ Nickel Boys opened in two theaters in Los Angeles and New York for a promising per-location average of $30,422, while Paramount’s September 5 opened in 7 locations for a solid location average of $12,714.

Dec. 15, 8 a.m. Updated with domestic and global numbers.

This story was originally published Dec. 14 at 11:18 a.m.

'Kraven the Hunter' Bombs With $11M Opening

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