After nearly twelve years away from the screen, the character of CIA agent Jack Ryan returns with the fourth actor playing the role in Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, out Friday. We’ve had Alec Baldwin, Harrison Ford, and Ben Affleck in the part and now it’s Chris Pine’s turn.
Based on the works of the late Tom Clancy, Shadow Recruit is the first Ryan pic not specifically based on one of his books. Kenneth Branagh, who most recently directed the first Thor movie, is behind the camera. Kevin Costner and Keira Knightley costar. As mentioned, it’s been since May 2002 when Affleck starred in The Sum of All Fears. This franchise has been rather consistent in its grosses. Here’s a rundown:
1990: The Hunt for Red October – opening: $17.1 million. Total domestic gross: $122 million.
1992: Patriot Games – opening: $18.5 million. Total domestic gross: $83.3 million.
1994: Clear and Present Danger – opening: $20.3 million. Total domestic gross: $122.1 million.
2002: The Sum of All Fears – opening: $31.1 million. Total domestic gross: $118.9 million.
Shadow Recruit was originally scheduled to debut over Christmas but was pushed back to January by Paramount when The Wolf of Wall Street was delayed to the holiday weekend. It will be interesting to see how the long gap between Ryan features affects its gross. While the previous entries have been solid grossers, I don’t really feel that there was a big clamoring for another installment. When the Bourne franchise shuffled the deck and put Jeremy Renner in the role with Matt Damon out, it opened with a solid $38 million in 2012. Yet that was far below what previous Bourne flicks had accomplished. And that franchise was more current with audiences as well. Recruit probably won’t reach the heights of what Bourne did two years ago. Chris Pine likely doesn’t have the star power to guarantee a huge opening. His other franchise, Star Trek, already has a built-in audience.
And then there’s the competition factor, which is significant. Lone Survivor just had the second biggest January opening of all time and it should continue to play well in its sophomore weekend. Recruit is going after the same crowd that Survivor appeals to. And there’s also Ride Along, Devil’s Due, and The Nut Job all opening which cater to African-American, horror, and family audiences, respectively.
Add all that up and I expect Recruit to have a respectable though unspectacular debut over the four day MLK weekend.
Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit opening weekend prediction: $25.6 million (Friday-to-Monday)
For my prediction on Ride Along, click here:
https://toddmthatcher.com/2014/01/12/ride-along-box-office-prediction/
For my prediction on Devil’s Due, click here:
https://toddmthatcher.com/2014/01/12/devils-due-box-office-prediction/
For my prediction on The Nut Job, click here:
https://toddmthatcher.com/2014/01/12/the-nut-job-box-office-prediction/