Admissions Down Ahead of Holiday Surge
A local period film timed for the upcoming Lunar New Year holiday led the chart as Korean films made up 70% of sales at the box office, while the calm before the holiday storm amounted to a quiet weekend with just 1.64 million tickets sold overall.
Showbox entered the Lunar New Year fray a week early with
Detective K: Secret of the Living Dead, the third entry in their popular period investigator series headlined by
KIM Myung-min and
OH Dal-su. The film opened with 786,000 sales (USD 6.03 million) over the weekend, and a total of 965,000 entries (USD 7.27 million) over five days. The opening is a slight improvement on 2015’s
Detective K : Secret of the Lost Island, but while both of the previous entries experienced significant increases in their sophomore weekends (which also fell during Lunar New Year festivities), it is unclear if this latest installment will experience the same kind of uptick as it faces much stronger competition.
Still a presence in its fourth weekend on the charts, local heart-warmer
Keys to the Heart saw its take cut in half as it remained in second and brought in another 223,000 spectators (USD 1.73 million), boosting its total to an impressive 3.22 million viewers (USD 23.95 million).
Coco’s rank was also unchanged as it eased 45%, with another 151,000 entries (USD 1.16 million) bringing its admissions total to 3.3 million (USD 24.02 million). Fellow animation Paddington 2 opened in fourth with 105,000 admissions (USD 760,000) during the weekend, with 126,000 tickets (USD 912,000) sold since its Thursday bow.
In fifth place was
Along with the Gods: The Two Worlds (2017), which welcomed another 72,000 viewers (USD 567,000). This raised its total to 14.33 million spectators (USD 106.3 million), pushing the fantasy epic past
Ode to My Father (2014) to make it the second most successful Korean film of all time, behind only
Roaring Currents (2014).
Two local Lunar New Year releases step up to the plate this Wednesday, with
CJ Entertainment’s thriller
Golden Slumber looking to outperform
Lotte Entertainment’s period drama
Heung-boo: The Revolutionist, but both will likely take a backseat to the behemoth that will be
Black Panther. The latest installment in Disney’s Marvel series was partially shot in Busan and has already built up a huge lead on the reservations chart, accounting for two thirds of all presales as of Monday morning.