Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice | |
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Directed by | Tim Burton |
Screenplay by | |
Story by |
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Based on | Characters by |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Haris Zambarloukos |
Edited by | Jay Prychidny |
Music by | Danny Elfman |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 104 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $100 million[2][3] |
Box office | $449.1 million[4][5] |
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is a 2024 American gothic dark fantasy comedy horror film directed by Tim Burton from a screenplay by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar. A sequel to Beetlejuice (1988) and the second film of the Beetlejuice franchise, the film stars Michael Keaton, Winona Ryder, and Catherine O'Hara reprising their roles alongside new cast members Justin Theroux, Arthur Conti, Monica Bellucci, Jenna Ortega, and Willem Dafoe. Set more than three decades after the first film, it follows Lydia Deetz, now a mother, struggling to keep her family together in the wake of a loss as the specter Betelgeuse[a] returns to haunt her.
After the success of Beetlejuice, plans for a sequel were announced by The Geffen Film Company, its original producers, and little materialized until 2011 when Warner Bros. Pictures hired Seth Grahame-Smith to pitch a story, which went through numerous revisions before being shelved in late 2019. Plans for a sequel were revived in early 2022, with Burton set to co-produce with Brad Pitt's studio Plan B Entertainment. After the casting process finished in early 2023, principal photography, supervised by cinematographer Haris Zambarloukos, took place in parts of England and the U.S. from May to November, despite being suspended for four months due to the 2023 actors' strike. The official title was revealed in February 2024. During post-production, editing was handled by Jay Prychidny, and the musical score was composed by longtime Burton collaborator Danny Elfman.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice opened the 81st Venice International Film Festival on August 28, 2024,[6] and was theatrically released overseas on September 4, 2024, and in the United States by Warner Bros. Pictures two days later. The film received generally positive reviews from critics and grossed over $449 million worldwide on an estimated $100 million budget, becoming the tenth-highest-grossing film of 2024.
Plot
[edit]In 2024, Lydia Deetz hosts the supernatural TV talk show Ghost House. She has been estranged from her daughter, Astrid, since Lydia's ex-husband and Astrid's father, Richard, died while in the Amazon. While taping an episode, Lydia hallucinates seeing Betelgeuse, the demon who tried to marry her 36 years earlier,[b] in the audience.
Shortly afterwards, Lydia's stepmother, Delia, informs Lydia that her father, Charles, had been eaten by a shark. They and Astrid travel to Winter River, Connecticut, for Charles' funeral. At the wake, Rory, Lydia's boyfriend and producer, pressures her to marry him on Halloween; she hesitantly agrees. Meanwhile, Astrid meets a local boy named Jeremy Frazier, who invites her to spend Halloween with him.
In the Afterlife, Betelgeuse oversees an office of "bio-exorcists", assisted by Bob, an anxious shrunken-head ghost. Betelgeuse is still obsessed with Lydia. Former actor-turned-ghost detective Wolf Jackson warns Betelgeuse that his former wife, Delores, has escaped captivity and gone on a murderous spree, draining the souls of the dead searching for him. The couple met during the Black Plague in Italy, but Delores was a cult leader who poisoned Betelgeuse as part of an immortality ritual; he killed her before succumbing to the poison.
Astrid discovers she has inherited her mother's psychic abilities and realizes Jeremy is a ghost; he persuades her to accompany him to the Afterlife to help regain his life. In exchange, she can meet her father's spirit. Lydia learns from a local realtor that Jeremy murdered his parents twenty-three years earlier and died when the police tried to arrest him. Lydia reluctantly summons Betelgeuse and signs a marriage contract in exchange for him taking her to the Afterlife to save Astrid. Betelgeuse blows open a hole between the worlds of the Living and the Dead; he disguises Bob as himself as a decoy. Wolf discovers Betelgeuse has brought a living person into the Afterlife and launches a manhunt for him, capturing the disguised Bob. Delores meets Bob at the police station while continuing her search for Betelgeuse and drains Bob's soul.
As Betelgeuse and Lydia search for Astrid, Jeremy escorts her through the Afterlife's bureaucracy. He admits to tricking Astrid into exchanging her life for his. Astrid is taken to the "Soul Train" to be sent to the Great Beyond. Richard spots and follows her. Lydia saves Astrid right before the Soul Train departs. They escape through a portal to Saturn's moon Titan, where Richard saves them from a sandworm. While Betelgeuse sends Jeremy to Hell, Richard shows Lydia and Astrid how to return to the Living world. Meanwhile, during a mourning ceremony for Charles, Delia is bitten by two venomous asps that she was assured were defanged. She arrives in the Afterlife and summons Betelgeuse to help find Charles; he agrees in exchange that Delia will help him find Lydia.
After Lydia and Astrid escape from the Afterlife, Astrid tearfully apologizes to Lydia for not believing her about ghosts. The two arrive at the church for Lydia and Rory's wedding. Betelgeuse appears with Delia and interrupts the ceremony. Betelgeuse injects Rory with "truth serum", forcing him to admit that he never believed in Lydia's abilities and has only been using her for her money since they first met. Betelgeuse prepares to marry Lydia when Delores arrives seeking revenge. Wolf also arrives, but Betelgeuse freezes him and his comrades to avoid arrest and continue the wedding. Astrid opens a portal to summon a sandworm from Titan, and Betelgeuse leads it to devour Delores and Rory. Astrid reveals that because Betelgeuse illegally brought Lydia into the Afterlife, their marriage contract is voided. Lydia recites Betelgeuse's name three times and banishes him back to the Afterlife. Delia returns to the Afterlife with Wolf. She is reunited with Charles as he is about to board the Soul Train to the Great Beyond.
As everything returns to normal, Lydia ends her Ghost House show to spend more time with Astrid, but soon has recurring nightmares about Betelgeuse.
Cast
[edit]- Michael Keaton as Betelgeuse, an afterlife ghost and "bio-exorcist" who wants to marry someone from the realm of the living. Both Keaton and director Tim Burton opted to keep the character as politically incorrect as he was in the original film due to their love for that character trait, with Burton deeming Betelgeuse as a character whose whole point is that he does not undergo any character arc or development, never evolving.[7]
- Winona Ryder as Lydia Deetz, the former gothic teenager who was almost forced to marry Betelgeuse, now mother of Astrid Deetz and hostess of the Ghost House with Lydia Deetz show. Ryder initially imagined her character would live as a spinster in the Maitland residence's attic, but appreciated the development of her character, particularly around her relationship with daughter Astrid.[8]
- Catherine O'Hara as Delia Deetz, Lydia's stepmother, Astrid's stepgrandmother, and Charles Deetz's widow, now the hostess of a real art show located in a SoHo gallery.[8]
- Jenna Ortega as Astrid Deetz, Lydia's teenage daughter and Delia's step-granddaughter.[9][10][11]
- Justin Theroux as Rory, Lydia's current boyfriend and a television producer.[8][12] Rory was inspired by Otho, Delia Deetz's interior design and exorcist friend played by the late Glenn Shadix in the original film. Writers Alfred Gough and Miles Millar devised him as a character who everyone wanted to see getting his comeuppance, like Otho, and enjoying the idea of Lydia being in a weird codependent relationship which everyone sees that way, herself included. Gough and Millar wanted the audience to understand why Rory is with Lydia and that he was a "schmuck", but they felt that they needed to find Rory's humanity without him being a mere punchline. Once Theroux was cast and connected with the writers over Zoom, he provided Gough and Millar with ideas they incorporated.[13]
- Willem Dafoe as Wolf Jackson, a ghost detective who, in life, was a B movie action star.[14]
- Monica Bellucci as Delores, Betelgeuse's ex-wife who, in life, was a mysterious soul-sucking witch who poisoned Betelgeuse several centuries earlier during the Black Plague before he killed her with an axe in retaliation.
- Arthur Conti as Jeremy Frazier, an undead teenage murderer who is Astrid's brief love interest.[15][16]
- Burn Gorman as Father Damien, a reverend in Winter River.[17]
- Santiago Cabrera as Richard, Astrid's late father and Lydia's former husband who disappeared in Brazil's Amazonas, who now works in the afterlife civil service alongside all others to have died by suicide.
- Nick Kellington as Bob, a shrinker and Betelgeuse's lead employee at the Afterlife Call Center whose soul was also consumed by Delores.
- Amy Nuttall as local real estate agent Jane Butterfield Jr., the daughter of the first film's Jane Butterfield Sr., portrayed in the previous film by Annie McEnroe; Jane Butterfield Jr. was previously portrayed by Rachel Mittelman in the first film as a child.
- Paul Warren as Tom, a bald, one-eyed shrinker and one of Betelgeuse's employees at the Afterlife Call Center.
- Mark Heenehan (physical) and Charlie Hopkinson (voice) as Charles Deetz, Lydia's father and Delia's deceased husband who was decapitated by a shark, hence why he goes to the afterlife without his upper half. The character is depicted with the likeness of original actor Jeffrey Jones through various means, including archival photos, paintings and an animated stop motion sequence that describes the character's death.[18][19][20] The character's death was inspired by a nightmare of Burton's about his own death.[21][22]
Danny DeVito portrays an afterlife janitor whose soul is consumed by Delores. Jane Leaney and David Ayres portray Mrs. and Mr. Frazier, Jeremy's murdered parents. Georgina Beedle portrays Janet, Wolf Jackson's secretary who "keeps him real", while Filipe Cates portrays Vlad, a young man dressed as a vampire who marries Astrid in Lydia's dream.
Production
[edit]Development
[edit]After the success of Beetlejuice (1988), a sequel was fast-tracked by The Geffen Film Company. Two Beetlejuice sequel scripts were commissioned in 1990: the first, Beetlejuice in Love, was penned by screenwriter Warren Skaaren, who did a heavy re-write on the first film's script. In Skaaren's sequel, Betelgeuse meets Leo, who tragically plummets to his death while proposing to his girlfriend, Julia, on the Eiffel Tower. When Leo enters the afterlife, Betelgeuse escapes to the world of the living and pursues Julia. Skaaren died shortly after turning in his first draft of the In Love script.[23] That same year, Tim Burton hired Jonathan Gems to write a potential Beetlejuice sequel titled Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian.[24] "Tim thought it would be funny to match the surfing backdrop of a beach movie with some sort of German Expressionism, because they're totally wrong together", Gems said.[25] The story followed the Deetz family moving to Hawaii, where Charles is developing a resort. They soon discover that his company is building on the burial ground of an ancient Hawaiian Kahuna. The spirit comes back from the afterlife to cause trouble, and Betelgeuse becomes a hero by winning a surf contest with magic. Michael Keaton and Winona Ryder agreed to do the film, on the condition that Burton directed, but both he and Keaton became occupied with Batman Returns (1992).[25]
Burton was still interested in Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian in early 1991. Impressed with Daniel Waters' work on Heathers (1989), which also stars Winona Ryder, Burton approached him for a rewrite. However, he eventually signed Waters to write the script for Batman Returns.[26] By August 1993, producer David Geffen hired Pamela Norris (Troop Beverly Hills, Saturday Night Live) to rewrite.[27] Warner Bros. approached Kevin Smith in 1996 to rewrite the script, although Smith turned down the offer in favor of Superman Lives. Smith later joked that his response was, "Didn't we say all we needed to say in the first Beetlejuice? Must we go tropical?"[28] In March 1997, Gems released a statement saying, "The Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian script is still owned by The Geffen Company and it will likely never get made. You really couldn't do it now anyway. Winona is too old for the role, and the only way they could make it would be to totally recast it."[25] Burton had considered several other sequel ideas as well over the years, saying in 2024, "We talked about lots of different things. That was early on when we were going, Beetlejuice and the Haunted Mansion, Beetlejuice Goes West, whatever. Lots of things came up",[29] but all those initial scenarios set in Hawaii, the Wild West or Paris, France were all scrapped.[30]
In September 2011, Warner Bros. hired Seth Grahame-Smith, who collaborated with Burton on Dark Shadows and Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (both 2012), to write and produce a sequel to Beetlejuice.[31] Grahame-Smith signed on with the intention of doing "a story that is worthy of us actually doing this for real, something that is not just about cashing in, is not just about forcing a remake or a reboot down someone's throat". He was also adamant that Keaton would return and that Warner Bros. would not recast the role. Burton and Keaton had not officially signed on but would return if the script was good enough.[32] Grahame-Smith met with Keaton in February 2012, "We talked for a couple of hours and talked about big picture stuff. It's a priority for Warner Bros. It's a priority for Tim. [Michael's] been wanting to do it for 20 years and he'll talk to anybody about it who will listen."[33]
I don't wanna be the guy that destroys the legacy and the memory of the first film, I would rather die. I would rather just not make it, I'd rather just throw the whole thing away than make something that pays no respect and doesn't live up even close to the legacy of the first film. The story would be set in a real time frame from 1988. This will be a true 26 or 27 years later sequel. What's great is that for Beetlejuice [sic], time means nothing in the afterlife, but the world outside is a different story.
—Seth Grahame-Smith (writer)[34]
In November 2013, Ryder hinted at a possible return for the sequel as well by saying, "I'm kind of sworn to secrecy but it sounds like it might be happening. It's 27 years later. And I have to say, I love Lydia Deetz so much. She was such a huge part of me. I would be really interested in what she is doing 27 years later." Ryder confirmed that she would only consider making a sequel if Burton and Keaton were involved.[35] In December 2014, Burton stated, "It's a character that I love and I miss actually working with Michael. There's only one Betelgeuse. We're working on a script and I think it's probably closer than ever and I'd love to work with him again."[36] In January 2015, writer Grahame-Smith told Entertainment Weekly that the script was finished and that he and Burton intended to start filming Beetlejuice 2 by the end of the year, and that both Keaton and Ryder would return in their respective roles.[37]
While negotiating to join the Netflix show Stranger Things as Joyce Byers in mid-2015, Ryder accepted that role under the sole request to the Duffer Brothers that if a Beetlejuice sequel ever got greenlighted, they would let her take a break from the series to film it, as she and Burton had been having conversations about the project since 2000; the Duffers agreed.[38] In August 2015, on Late Night with Seth Meyers, Ryder confirmed she would be reprising her role in the sequel.[39] In May 2016, Burton stated, "It's something that I really would like to do in the right circumstances, but it's one of those films where it has to be right. It's not a kind of a movie that cries out [for a sequel], it's not the Beetlejuice trilogy. So it's something that if the elements are right—because I do love the character and Michael's amazing as that character, so yeah we'll see. But there's nothing concrete yet."[40] In October 2017, Mike Vukadinovich was hired to re-write the script.[41] In April 2019, Warner Bros. stated the sequel had been shelved.[42]
Pre-production
[edit]In February 2022, a sequel was announced again, this time produced by Brad Pitt's studio Plan B Entertainment, alongside Warner Bros.[43] Burton stated in October 2022 that he was not involved in the project, but backtracked days later, saying "nothing is out of the question".[44] Burton ultimately returned as the film's director and tried to strip everything from the story to go to the basics of working with "good people, actors and puppets", feeling that the project made him reflect why he liked making movies.[45] Burton came up with the film's story upon thinking about Lydia Deetz, a character of his with whom he connected as a teenager, wondering what could have been of her life after the first film's events and how her family life could have developed, turning from a "cool teenager" into a "f—ed-up adult" who hosts a popular medium-related show titled Ghost House with Lydia Deetz whose daughter hates her, Burton credited the years of his life since the original film's release as the reason he couldn't do Beetlejuice Beetlejuice until then, having experienced many of those things himself, finding the project a very personal movie starring a weird family in a family-friendly and emotional story of three generations experiencing basic things everyone feels in life when growing up.[30] Burton and Keaton agreed to not use excessive amounts of technology, and sought to make the film feel "handmade".[46] With a plot likened to Willy Wonka's psychedelic boat ride in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971), which takes "very big swings" like unhinged and uncontrollable phantasmagoria and Burton's head being "dumped out" onto the screen, Keaton felt the film's story to be stronger than its predecessor's, with "more of a connection" to the audience in terms of characters, finding "beyond delightful" things he wasn't ready for while Ryder confidently expressed her belief that the film exceeded her high expectations and expected every generation to find something they can appreciate from the film.[47]
In March 2023, it was reported by Variety that Jenna Ortega, who previously worked with Burton on the 2022 Netflix series Wednesday, was in talks to play Astrid Deetz,[10] Lydia's daughter,[48][49] while Burton was now expected to direct the film.[50] Ortega and Ryder bonded as they worked together, sharing hobbies such as both being cinephiles and regarding the experience of working with each other special, resulting in Ortega developing her own performance for Astrid.[51] In May, Danny Elfman announced he was returning to compose the score for the sequel, while it was also revealed Ortega was confirmed to star, and Wednesday creators Alfred Gough and Miles Millar wrote the script.[52] Justin Theroux, Burn Gorman, Arthur Conti, Filipe Cates, and Willem Dafoe would also be added to the cast, in undisclosed roles, with Dafoe's being described as an afterlife officer.[9][15][16][17][53] Dafoe later explained to Variety at the Marrakesh Film Festival that his character is an afterlife police officer who used to be a B movie action star in life before dying in an accident, with his skills leading him to become a detective within the realm.[14] He later regretted sharing those details about his character, fearing that Burton may get angry with him for revealing a few spoilers from the film.[54] Conti auditioned for the role over a Zoom call with Burton and a chemistry test with Ortega, receiving the news that he got the part on April Fools' Day, leading him to initially dismiss it as a practical joke.[55] Catherine O'Hara reprises her role as Delia Deetz, as well as Monica Bellucci joining the cast as Betelgeuse's wife Delores.[56] Gough didn't originally write Delores' first victim, a deceased janitor, with an actor in mind, so Burton called his frequent collaborator Danny DeVito for the role and DeVito accepted it.[13]
Colleen Atwood, a frequent collaborator of Burton, was announced to be working on the costume design for the film.[57] Atwood disclosed that Betelgeuse's striped suit would return in the film, as it is trademark to the character's quintessential appearance in the same way the titular character of Lewis Carroll's novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) sports an iconic blue dress, although Keaton disagreed and preferred Betelgeuse's burgundy tuxedo.[58] For Lydia Deetz's attire, Atwood was inspired by Cassandra Peterson's iconic Elvira: Mistress of the Dark (1988) character.[59] O'Hara later confirmed that the film would include Harry Belafonte's 1955 song "Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)", which was featured in the first film and serve as an unofficial memorial for Belafonte, who died just before the start of filming.[60] The writers decided that the wedding sequence would feature a musical number with Betelgeuse "being the crazy ringleader of that whole situation", but were unsure of what song to use, and Burton suggested "MacArthur Park", which Gough found to be "the crazy, weird, insane thing you need at the end of this movie".[13] Keaton insisted that Betelgeuse had limited screen time in the film like the first movie, saying, "The idea was, no, no, no, you can't load it up with Betelgeuse, that'll kill it, the Betelgeuse character doesn't drive the story as much as he did in the first one. He's more part of the storyline in this one as opposed to the first one, which is a case of, this thing comes in and drives the movie a little bit."[61]
Filming
[edit]Filming was originally scheduled to begin in mid-2022.[62][63] Later, it was delayed to an expected start date of May 10, 2023, taking place in London if the 2023 WGA strike did not lead to another delay in production.[64][65] Production was officially confirmed to have begun the following day,[15] with Haris Zambarloukos serving as cinematographer[66] and Jay Prychidny serving as editor.[67] On May 18, 2023, it was reported that filming was taking place around the Princess Helena College in Preston, Hertfordshire, England.[68][69] Exterior filming took place in East Corinth, Vermont (the location of the original movie's outdoor scenes), in mid-2023.[70] Filming was suspended in July due to the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike.[71] Burton described the film, which he enjoyed making, as being "99% done".[45] It had two days of production left, which was interrupted, with Ortega being contacted to continue filming four days after the strike had ended.[72] Filming resumed on November 16, 2023, in Melrose, Massachusetts,[73] and wrapped in Vermont on November 30, 2023.[74]
Post-production
[edit]By March 2024, Keaton had seen a completed rough cut of the film and stated that further editing would occur thereafter.[75] Later that month, it was stated in The Hollywood Reporter that Jeffrey Jones would not reprise his role as Charles Deetz in the film, his character being revealed in the trailers to have been killed off;[76] it had been speculated that Jones didn't return due to legal issues Jones had in the interim and the controversy surrounding films he has made since the early 2000s due to his status as a registered sex offender.[77]
In April, Geena Davis stated she would not be returning as Barbara Maitland due to her age, saying, "Our characters were stuck the way they looked when they died forever, so it's been a while, it's been a minute."[78] In August, Burton would confirm via People that Davis and Alec Baldwin didn't return for Beetlejuice Beetlejuice as the Maitlands weren't needed for the story he wanted to tell, which he admitted that he personally couldn't have done in 1989 due to it focusing on three generations within the Deetz family. To explain their absence, Burton stated that the film would reveal the Maitlands used a loophole to leave their former house during the interim between this film and the original.[79] Gough told Entertainment Weekly that an early draft for the film had the Maitlands making a cameo appearance at the end, he and Millar discussing the idea with Burton, but all three moved on from the concept as they felt no de-aging technology would be convincing enough to make the audience believe that Davis and Baldwin hadn't aged since 1988. Also, they felt that the Maitland couple's story had been told and their appearance would clash with Burton's decision to not make any fan service.[80] In any event, much like Jones, legal issues would have prevented Baldwin from returning for the film due to the then-ongoing Rust shooting incident that saw Baldwin accidentally shoot and kill cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film Rust (2024).[81]
The production VFX supervisor was Angus Bickerton, working with VFX producer Alex Bicknell, supported by visual effects studios Framestore, One of Us and BUF.[82][83]
Music
[edit]Danny Elfman, who scored Beetlejuice, returned for the sequel.[84] The soundtrack to the film featured licensed music being incorporated in the film as well as two cues from Elfman's score being included.[85] A cover of "Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)" is performed by Alfie Davis and the Sylvia Young Theatre School Choir and was released on May 23, 2024.[86] The 11-song soundtrack was released by WaterTower Music on August 30, 2024, and a vinyl edition is set to be released by Waxwork Records.[87][88]
Release
[edit]Beetlejuice Beetlejuice opened the 81st Venice International Film Festival on August 28, 2024, at the Sala Grande in a non-competitive slot.[6] The film was theatrically released by Warner Bros. Pictures on September 6, 2024, including IMAX, 4DX and ScreenX engagements.[89] Warner Bros.' former regime considered releasing the film straight to streaming on Max, but Burton butted heads with the studio over the film's costs and distribution; Warner was unsure on spending a projected $147 million on a sequel to a 1980s film from Burton, who hadn't had a hit since Alice in Wonderland (2010). Burton's demands were granted once Warner Bros. Motion Picture Group co-chairs and CEOs Michael De Luca and Pamela Abdy were installed in their positions in 2022, who agreed to a major theatrical release if the budget was under $100 million; Burton reportedly spent $99 million, thus fulfilling the deal.[90] Initially, the film was supposed to be delayed to 2025, because of the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, despite most of the production having been completed.[91] However, in February 2024, the producers reiterated the release date as well as revealing the official title.[92][93][94] At their 2024 CineEurope presentation, Warner Bros. announced that the film would be released overseas on September 4, 2024, two days before its domestic premiere.[95] The promotion included tie-in marketing deals with CarMax, Progressive, Secret, Denny's, Fanta, NYX and Sally Hansen.[96]
Home media
[edit]Beetlejuice Beetlejuice was released in 4K Ultra HD to video-on-demand platforms on October 8, 2024, with a DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD (Steelbook) physical release expected to follow November 19, 2024.[97]
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]As of November 6, 2024[update], Beetlejuice Beetlejuice has grossed $292.6 million in the United States and Canada, and $156.5 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $449.1 million.[4][5]
In the United States and Canada, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice was released alongside The Front Room and was projected to gross $100–110 million from 4,200 theaters in its opening weekend.[98] The film made $42 million on its first day, including $13 million from Thursday night previews.[99][100] The film went on to debut with $111 million, registering the second biggest opening of September (behind It), the second biggest for Burton's career (behind Alice in Wonderland), and the third biggest opening of the year (behind Deadpool & Wolverine and Inside Out 2). Around 7.7 million admissions, 73% of the total weekend's box office earnings, came from the film alone.[101] The opening weekend gross surpassed the entire $74 million run of the original film, unadjusted for inflation.[102] The film then grossed $51.6 million in its second weekend (a drop of 54%),[103] and $25.9 million its third weekend (a drop of 49%), beating newcomers Speak No Evil and Transformers One, and finishing in first for three consecutive weeks.[104][105][106] It was eventually dethroned by The Wild Robot in its fourth weekend, grossing $16 million.[107]
Internationally, the film debuted with $36.2 million from 69 markets. It had the biggest openings in the UK ($9.6 million), Mexico ($6.5 million), Australia ($2.6 million), Spain ($2.5 million) and Italy ($1.7 million).[108]
Critical response
[edit]On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 77% of 352 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.5/10. The website's consensus reads: "Michael Keaton's devious poltergeist still has plenty of juice left in this madcap return to form for Tim Burton, marrying charming practical effects and ghoulish gags to provide a fun fun time."[109] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 62 out of 100, based on 61 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[110] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale, up from the "B" earned by the first film, while those surveyed by PostTrak gave it an 81% overall positive score, with 68% saying they would definitely recommend it.[100]
Manohla Dargis of The New York Times called the film a "fun but less edgy sequel".[111] Xan Brooks, writing for The Guardian, stated, "Burton's game attempt to bring the 1980s horror-comedy back from the spirit world is full of gaudy set-pieces but fails to add much to the original."[112] Margaret Roarty of The Film Magazine stated that "the filmmaker manages to create something just as wacky and weird and meaningful as the original film."[113]
Controversy in Poland
[edit]In Poland, the scene where Astrid Deetz wears a Halloween costume, dressing up as 19th-century Polish-French scientist Marie Skłodowska-Curie, sparked a controversy, because Deetz refers to Skłodowska-Curie as only a "French scientist". Even though Marie was naturalised French, she was born and raised in Poland. As she kept a strong sense of Polish identity, using both of her surnames and naming the first chemical element she discovered polonium after her native country, she is widely considered a Polish scientist, especially in Poland. The Polish dub of the film corrected this mistake, with Skłodowska-Curie described as "the Polish physicist".[114]
Future
[edit]When asked about a potential third film, Burton said, "Let's do the math... it took 35 years to do this, so I'll be over 100. But I guess it's possible with the advent [sic] of science these days, but I don't think so."[115]
Notes
[edit]- ^ The title character's name is variously spelled "Betelgeuse", "Beetle Juice", and "Beetlejuice" in the film, script, and credits. The "Betelgeuse" spelling is used throughout this article for consistency.
- ^ As depicted in Beetlejuice (1988).
References
[edit]- ^ "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (12A)". BBFC. August 19, 2024. Archived from the original on September 9, 2024. Retrieved August 20, 2024.
- ^ Rubin, Rebecca (September 4, 2024). "'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' Aims to Clear $100 Million in Scary-Good Opening Weekend". Variety. Archived from the original on September 4, 2024. Retrieved September 4, 2024.
- ^ Barnes, Brooks (September 15, 2024). "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Hands Warner Bros. a Lifeline". The New York Times. Retrieved September 15, 2024.
- ^ a b "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on March 22, 2024. Retrieved November 7, 2024.
- ^ a b "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024) - Financial Information". The Numbers. Archived from the original on September 8, 2024. Retrieved November 7, 2024.
- ^ a b Tartaglione, Nancy (July 2, 2024). "Tim Burton's 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' To Open Venice Film Festival". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on July 2, 2024. Retrieved July 2, 2024.
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