Jolie casts spell on box office

Angelina Jolie as Maleficent. Picture: AP

The biggest box-office debut of Angelina Jolie's career propelled Disney's twisted fairy tale Maleficent to a scary-good $US70 million ($A75.74 million) opening.

The PG-rated fantasy beat forecasts to easily top all films over the weekend, according to studio estimates on Sunday. Though Maleficent was early on considered a risky endeavour for Disney that might turn away family audiences by retelling Sleeping Beauty from the villain's perspective, the film emerged as a hit largely because of the draw of Jolie.

Star power has been increasingly elusive in modern Hollywood, where name-brand concepts often rule the box-office. But Jolie, in her first live-action starring role in years, drove interest for Maleficent despite lacklustre reviews from critics.

"It's a unique thing," said Dave Hollis, head of distribution for Disney.

"Her star power transcends borders and genre."

Seth MacFarlane's Western comedy A Million Ways to Die in the West was out-gunned by Maleficent. The R-rated Universal release opened in third place with a tepid $US17.1 million despite a starry cast of Liam Neeson, Charlize Theron and Amanda Seyfried. By contrast, MacFarlane's Ted (for which he's making a sequel) opened with $US54.4 million in 2012.

Last weekend's top film, Fox's big-budget mutant sequel X-Men: Days of Future Past, dropped to second with $US32.6 million. It's a somewhat steep decline for Days of Future Past, but the film made $US95.6 million internationally in its second week, good enough to push its global cumulative total past $US500 million already.

But Maleficent dominated the marketplace, which has seen female-leading films continually challenge the much-disputed but still prevalent notion that male stars fuel the box office.

"The whole movie kind of rises and sets on her performance," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior analyst for box-office tracker Rentrak.

"The concept is the character. The character is completely linked to the person playing that role."

The film was a balancing act for Disney, which is used to churning out brighter tales. Hollis credited the company's marketing department for "walking the fine line" of selling the movie to families (which made up 45 per cent of the audience, according to Disney) and suggesting an edginess that would appeal to a broader audience. Maleficent earned about $US100 million internationally.

"If you go to Disney, the longest lines are for the scariest rides," Dergarabedian said. "We're going to see more of this, where the villains are the new heroes."

Disney has had success reimagining fairy tales in recent years with Alice in Wonderland ($US116 million in 2010) and Oz the Great and Powerful ($US79.1 million debut in 2013). Maleficent fell short of those releases, but it was made in the same lineage. Robert Stromberg, the production designer for both earlier movies, makes his directorial debut with Maleficent.

Next weekend will bring a battle between Shailene Woodley in the young adult novel adaptation The Fault in Our Stars and Tom Cruise in the sci-fi thriller Edge of Tomorrow. Edge of Tomorrow got a jump on its North America release, taking in $US20 million in 28 countries over the weekend.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through to Sunday at US and Canadian theatres, according to Rentrak. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released on Monday.

1. Maleficent, $US70 million, ($US100.6 million international).

2. X-Men: Days of Future Past, $US32.6 million ($US95.6 million international).

3. A Million Ways to Die in the West," $17.1 million ($10.3 million international).

4. Godzilla, $US12.2 million ($US15 million international).

5. Blended, $US8.4 million.

6. Neighbours, $US7.7 million ($US7.6 million international).

7. The Amazing Spider-Man 2, $US3.8 million ($US4.1 million international).

8. Million Dollar Arm, $US3.7 million.

9. Chef, $US2 million.

10. The Other Woman, $US1.4 million.