Box Office Race

Movies about black women sell tickets

Way more people saw ‘Girls Trip’ than ‘Rough Night’ during their respective opening weekends.

Box Office Race

‘Girls Trip’ is a box office hit

The black woman-driven film earned $30.4 million its opening weekend.
By comparison, its white analog, ‘Rough Night’, earned $8 million its opening weekend.
‘Girls Trip’ is yet more proof that audiences are hungry for POC- and women-centered media.
Box Office Race

Movies about black women sell tickets

Way more people saw ‘Girls Trip’ than ‘Rough Night’ during their respective opening weekends.

Girls Trip opened to rave reviews and swarming audiences on July 21, raking in $30.4 million in its opening weekend — yet another reminder to the Hollywood film industry that black-directed and -led projects are well worth investing in. The R-rated comedy — starring Tiffany Haddish, Regina Hall, Queen Latifah, and Jada Pinkett Smith as four friends who reunite on a weekend getaway to New Orleans, and directed by Malcolm D. Lee — was the no. 2 film of the weekend, second to Christopher Nolan’s Dunkirk.

And its enormous success is only highlighted by the fact that Rough Night, a similarly premised white-directed and -led movie only brought in $8 million during its opening weekend last month, even despite outspending Girls Trip by $1 million.

The two films drew comparisons early on for their similar themes, marketing, and timing, calling attention to the ways productions are still racially segregated in Hollywood. But with the opening box office numbers in, both are serving to illustrate what audiences and filmmakers from marginalized communities have been saying for decades: Diverse racial and ethnic representation in media is not just socially important, it’s what consumers want and are willing to pay for.

Culture

Hollywood made a white version and a black version of the same movie

In theaters soon.
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