The Rock, as "San Andreas" star Dwayne Johnson was once known, may have to change his nickname to The Boulder if his new earthquake movie stays on its current roll at the worldwide box office.
Monday's final figures show "San Andreas" brought in $64 million from roughly 60 foreign markets over the weekend, about $4 million higher than Warner Bros. had estimated Sunday. The domestic haul for the action film co-financed by Village Roadshow was bigger than estimated as well, at $54.5 million, so it finished with nearly $120 million in its first weekend — or more than its $110 million production budget.
The biggest foreign territory was Mexico, where "San Andreas" set a record for largest opening ever for a disaster film with $10 million. The U.K. ($7.2 million) and Russia ($5.3 million) also delivered. Just how big "San Andreas" is going to play overseas should come into sharper focus soon.
Moviegoers' qualms about real earthquakes didn't seem to hurt "San Andreas" in the U.S. and Canada, and in fact 19 of the film's top 20 locations were in California. But China, where it opens Tuesday, could be a different story. That country is much closer to Nepal, site of the devastating April earthquake that killed 8,800 people.
Opening a movie in China isn't like going to the box-office equivalent of an ATM, despite what some in the industry may think. Just ask Disney, which has had a tough time getting "Tomorrowland" out of the gate behind the Great Wall.
So far, the Brad Bird-directed sci-fi adventure saga has taken in less than $14 million in a little under a week. To put that in perspective, "Avengers: Age of Ultron" made about $20 million more than that in its first day there, kicking off a run that has brought in $225 million so far.