“The Matrix Resurrections” has also struggled to attract audiences - in North America, where it debuted day-and-date on HBO Max, and overseas. That pushes the prequel in the “Kingsman” spy comedy franchise to $49.2 million overseas and $74.3 million worldwide, a lackluster result. The film, which opened around Christmas, has made $81 million internationally and $190.8 million globally so far.Īnother holiday release, Disney and 20th Century’s “The King’s Man,” added another $13.4 million from 43 territories over the weekend. “No Way Home” isn’t playing in China, which is the world’s biggest moviegoing market.Įlsewhere at the international box office, Universal’s animated musical comedy “Sing 2” picked up $17 million from 54 overseas markets.
Other top-earning territories include Mexico with $69.7 million, South Korea with $55.8 million and France with $55.2 million. Holland’s birthplace - amassing $105.8 million to date. The film has done especially well in the U.K. Among holdover markets, “No Way Home” brought in solid receipts in the United Kingdom ($6.2 million), Mexico ($2.5 million) and Indonesia ($1.2 million). Over the weekend, “No Way Home” opened in Japan with $11.8 million, which is ahead of ticket sales for 2017’s “Homecoming” by 76% and ahead of 2019’s “Far From Home” by 35% in the same country. Internationally, the newest Tom Holland-led comic book adaptation has collected a stellar $867.5 million since debuting in December. In no time, it should take fifth place, which belongs to “Avengers: Infinity War” ($678 million), and could eventually land in fourth place, where “Black Panther” ($700 million) currently sits.
With $668 million in ticket sales, it is now the sixth-highest grossing movie in history at the domestic box office, surpassing “Titanic” ($659 million) and “Jurassic World” ($652 million). At the domestic box office, “Spider-Man: No Way Home” has remained a force on the big screen despite the rapidly spreading omicron variant of COVID-19.