Spider-Man: No Way Home, The King's Man

Source: Sony/20th Century Fox

‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’, ‘The King’s Man’

Rank Film (Distributor) Three-day gross (Dec 31-Jan 2) Total gross to date Week
1 Spider-Man: No Way Home (Sony) £6m £69.8m 3
The King’s Man (Disney) £1.1m £3.5m 1
3 Clifford: The Big Red Dog (eOne)
£778,802  £6m 4
The Matrix: Resurrections £760,427 £5.3m 2
5 West Side Story  £397,792 £5.1m 4

GBP to USD conversion rate: 1.35
Chart courtesy of Comscore. 

Spider-Man: No Way Home has continued its reign at the top of the UK-Ireland box office chart across the New Year’s Day weekend (December 31-January 2), with £6m in its third session.

That is an increase of 31% from the Tom Holland-led film’s second session, which took £4.6m across the Christmas weekend. The Sony feature has now grossed a total of £69.8m at the UK-Ireland box office.

Disney’s Kingsman prequel The King’s Man has done the best out of this week’s new releases, ahead of Titane and The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain. The King’s Man is directed by Matthew Vaughn and stars Ralph Fiennes, Rhys Ifans, Harris Dickinson, Gemma Arterton and Tom Hollander, and took £1.1m from 628 locations, with a location average of £1,751. This doesn’t match up to Kingsman: The Golden Circle, which took £8.5m in its opening weekend in 2017. However, The King’s Man has also received a further £2.4m from previews, boosting its total up to £3.5m.

The rest of the top five has been dominated by holdovers, with eOne’s Clifford: The Big Red Dog taking £778,802 in its fourth session, up 122% from its previous week, bringing it up to £6m.

The Matrix: Resurrections, released by Warner Bros, took £760,427 in its second session, down 72% on its first weekend including previews, and 16% excluding previews. The total is £5.3m.

Disney’s West Side Story grossed £397,792 in its fourth weekend, an increase of 87%, with its total now up to £5.1m.

New releases

Cannes Palme d’Or winner Titane, Julia Ducournau’s second feature, released by Altitude, took £28,803 across the weekend at 81 locations, giving a location average of £356. This figure is plumped up to £121,920 when including previews from its December 26 release. 

Studiocanal’s biographical drama The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as British artist and cat enthusiast Louis Wain alongside Claire Foy and Andrea Riseborough, has been released in 232 locations taking £67,130, with a location average of £290. Including previews, the total stands at £85,763.

Trafalgar Releasing’s Cinderella - Met Opera 2022 took £23,039 from 91 locations, averaging £253. Curzon’s The Humans took £4,625 across 18 locations, with an average of £257. Including previews, its total is £14,230.

Holdovers

Animated Disney adventure Encanto took £241,873 in its sixth session, bringing it to £6.1m.

Universal’s House Of Gucci brought in £139,718 in its sixth weekend, up an impressive 191% on its previous session and bringing its total to £8.8m, while Sony’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife also saw a strong increase, taking £127,872 in its seventh session, up 118% on the previous weekend, to a total of £11m.

Hindi-language sports drama 83, distributed by Reliance, took £85,909 in its second session, down 52%, with a total now of £450,942.