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The South Korean box office remained under local control this past weekend as “The Match” continued its commanding run, earning $2.7 million and accounting for 54.7% of the market share.
The Go-themed sports drama added 427,007 admissions from April 4 to 6, bringing its cumulative gross to $8.6 million with 1.3 million tickets sold, according to Kobis, the tracking service operated by the Korean Film Council.
Debuting in second place was Ha Jung-woo’s “Lobby,” a comedy-drama centered on a day of golf during which intense lobbying for a government contract worth billions takes place. The film earned $672,033 over the weekend from 101,520 admissions across 978 screens. Its total gross since its April 2 debut stands at $1.07 million.
Japanese animation “Attack on Titan The Movie: The Last Attack” held third with $428,886 and 60,751 admissions. Now in its fourth week, the climactic installment in the anime series has pulled in $4.3 million from 642,113 viewers.
In a tight race for fourth and fifth, animation “Flow” edged out Bong Joon Ho’s “Mickey 17” by less than $200. “Flow” earned $130,418 from 19,988 viewers, bringing its total to $903,115. “Mickey 17,” now in its sixth weekend, brought in $130,269 and 19,135 additional admissions. The sci-fi epic starring Robert Pattinson has now earned just over $20.1 million from nearly 3 million admissions.
Horror film “Heretic,” starring Hugh Grant, opened in sixth place with $88,889 and 15,245 admissions. The film had a limited release across 152 screens.
Lee Dae-hee’s Korean sci-fi “Mr. Robot” debuted at No. 7 with $81,333 and 14,072 admissions, while Vatican drama “Conclave” continued its steady run in eighth with $86,278 and 12,519 weekend viewers, lifting its total to $1.6 million.
K-pop group Seventeen’s “Right Here” world tour concert film brought in $183,986 from event screenings, earning it a ninth-place finish despite only 96 screens. It now has a cumulative total of $270,290 from 14,728 fans.
Rounding out the top 10, U.S. fantasy “Snow White” added $59,226 and 9,609 admissions, reaching a total of $1.2 million with 186,462 tickets sold.
The top 10 films combined for approximately $5.6 million, a slight uptick from last weekend’s $5.2 million, buoyed by the strong performance of local releases.