Why Pan could be this year's biggest flop

Actors Hugh Jackman (C) and Levi Miller (R) smile as director Joe Wright takes photos during the...
Actors Hugh Jackman (C) and Levi Miller (R) smile as director Joe Wright takes photos during the blue carpet premiere of "Pan" in Mexico City. Photo: Reuters

Warner Brothers can add another flop to its list of movie failures after the big budget Pan brought in a puny $US15.5 million (NZ$23m) in America in its opening weekend.

The figures, provided by Variety, suggest the film could be shaping up to be a bigger disaster than 2012's John Carter, which just managed to make back its production budget thanks to popularity with global audiences.

So far, Pan has fared a little better overseas, bringing in US$25.1 million (NZ$37.5m) from foreign audiences, Box Office Mojo reported.

Variety reported the movie cost NZ$224 million to make and would need to garner nearly NZ$600 million from global audiences in order to break even, once all costs including promotion were taken into account.

The movie, which is billed as a prequel to the well-known story of the boy who wouldn't grow up, has received generally unfavourable reviews on movie review site Metacritic, with an average review rating of just 35%.

Early reviews criticised Pan's clichéd story and strange style choices, which include a random musical interlude where the cast sings Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit in an otherwise non-musical movie set in World War II-era London.

Variety's Andrew Barker said the film contained "the most hackneyed of contemporary fantasy-action tropes," calling it a "bungled bust" lacking in light heartedness and fun.

The film's cast includes Hugh Jackman, Rooney Mara and Garrett Hedlund. Joe Wright, best known for prestige fare like Atonement, directed the picture.

Pan's failure continues a rocky stretch for Warner Brothers, which has suffered the string of pricey missteps recently, losing tens of millions on the likes of We Are Your Friends, The Man From U.N.C.L.E. and Jupiter Ascending.

It's been a tough season for most studios; Sony's Pixels has been widely slated as one of the year's worst movies, Disney's Tomorrowland was expected to lose more than $US100 million and Fox's Fantastic Four was the first Marvel superhero movie to fail to excite audiences.

Meanwhile, Ridley Scott has returned to form with his latest flick The Martian.

Starring Matt Damon, the sci-fi thriller took in a better-than-expected $NZ55 million domestically in its opening weekend, topping the list of releases. It took in a further $US58 million globally.

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