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‘Focus’ tops ‘Fifty Shades’ at weekend box office

Will Smith and Margot Robbie in a scene from 'Focus.'. Handout

NEW YORK – Will Smith’s con-man caper Focus disrobed Fifty Shades of Grey at the box office, but the film’s modest $19.1 million opening still left questions about the drawing power of the once unstoppable star.

According to studio estimates Sunday, Focus easily topped all competitors on a weekend with little competition at North American multiplexes. In second place was the Colin Firth spy thriller Kingsman: The Secret Service, which made $11.8 million in its third week of release.

After two weeks atop the box office, Fifty Shades of Grey continued its steep slide, landing in fourth with an estimated $10.9 million. Fifty Shades, which has made $486.2 million globally, fell just behind The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water, which earned $11.2 million in its fourth week.

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The weekend’s only other new wide release, horror film The Lazarus Effect, opened in fifth place with $10.6 million.

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But the weekend was largely seen, fairly or not, as a referendum on Smith’s star power. Focus, written and directed by the Crazy, Stupid, Love duo Glenn Ficarra and John Requa, is Smith’s first film since 2013’s After Earth, the sci-fi flop in which he co-starred with his son, Jaden.

Smith has been frank about the sting of that film’s box-office performance. “I can’t allow the box-office success, or lack thereof, to determine my self-image,” he said in a recent interview with The Associated Press.

But Focus, made for about $50 million and co-starring Margot Robbie of The Wolf of Wall Street, was never intended to be a summer-sized blockbuster. It had been predicted to make around $21 million.

Some of last Sunday’s Oscar winners saw slight bumps at the box office.

Best-picture winner Birdman (Or the Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) added some 800 screens to bring in $2 million over the weekend, pushing its total past $40 million. Still Alice, for which Julianne Moore won best actress, added 553 screens and earned $2.7 million. It’s now made $12 million.

American Sniper, far and away the biggest box-office hit of the best-picture nominees, was also easily the top post-Oscars draw. It added another $7.7 million, to bring its cumulative domestic gross to $331.1 million.

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