John Krasinski's imaginary friends movie ''IF'' claimed the top spot at the box office this weekend according to studio estimates Sunday. Its $35 million North American debut was also a bit lower than some projections.
Is that a disappointment? An ominous sign of the box office times? Or is the final story on '' IF " yet to be written? It's not just your imagination: In these bumpy early weeks of the 2024 summer box office season, in which nothing has been a runaway hit and every new movie has more and more pressure to succeed, ''IF'' hit a nerve.
Starring Ryan Reynolds, Cailey Fleming, and an army of A-list voices including Steve Carell, Matt Damon, Emily Blunt, Louis Gossett Jr., Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Maya Rudolph, ''IF'' was an original idea from Krasinski, who wrote, directed and co-stars.
Paramount debuted the film, which cost a reported $110 million to produce, in 4,041 locations in North America. Internationally, it earned an estimated $20 million from 56 markets, adding up to a $55 million global debut.
''Families came out in force and they loved the film,'' said Chris Aronson, who heads Paramount's domestic distribution.
There are several somewhat contradictory narratives swirling around its performance as well. With its PG-rating, ''IF'' was the first major family friendly film to open in theaters in weeks. And unlike a front-loaded superhero or horror movie, family pics are often running a marathon not a sprint. Last June, Pixar's ''Elemental'' was assumed to be dead on arrival when it opened with $29.5 million domestically. But it continued earning throughout the summer and ultimately made nearly $500 million globally.
''IF'' got middling reviews from critics (it's currently sitting at a ''rotten'' 49% on Rotten Tomatoes), but, as with ''Elemental,'' audiences gave it a solid A CinemaScore this weekend. The studio considers it a successful debut and is optimistic about its longevity as summer actually begins for school age children.
''I think it bodes well for moviegoing in general as we move into the summer movie season," Aronson said. "Kids are out of school starting this coming week and I couldn't think of a better film to be in the marketplace than this one: It's new, it's fresh, its original, and it's such a heartwarming film.''