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‘Peacemaker' Actor Takes Aim at ‘John Wick' Spin-off ‘Ballerina' After Box Office Flop

‘Peacemaker' Actor Takes Aim at ‘John Wick' Spin-off ‘Ballerina' After Box Office Flop

Yahoo3 days ago
It's far from uncommon to see a movie earn strong reviews from critics and fans, yet underperform at the box office. This was the case for the John Wick spin-off Ballerina, starring Ana de Armas. While fans specifically offered glowing reviews of the movie, it still failed to make much noise at the box office.
Although the film, officially titled From the World of John Wick: Ballerina, was considered a "flop" at the box office, de Armas' performance was far from the reason. Even still, it didn't stop Peacemaker actor Frank Grillo from taking aim at the actress.
Ana de Armas Hit With Underhanded Criticism From 'Peacemaker' Actor Frank Grillo
In a bit of a strange comment during a recent interview with the Peacemaker cast, Grillo, who plays Rick Flag Sr., decided to praise his castmate, Jennifer Holland, by taking aim at de Armas and Ballerina.
Grillo was speaking with CBR when his comments about Holland resulted in a stray going directly at the movie's star.
"By the way, she's a legit badass. I mean, if she was in Ballerina it would have been a successful movie. I mean, she is a killer," Grillo stated.
Almost immediately after the comment, a response from a castmate of "Frank!" can be heard. The rest of the cast playfully jabbed Grillo after his statement, and then the interview continued.
'Ballerina' Drew Rave Reviews From Fans, but the Box Office Numbers Don't Tell the Story
While Ballerina started off at the box office by pulling in roughly $25 million domestically, that landed below its initial tracking of around $35 million. It was an uphill climb from there, and the movie never truly gained much momentum.
The John Wick spin-off finished with a worldwide total of $132 million, with $74 million internationally and $58 million domestically, per Box Office Mojo. The problem was that it had a production budget that was estimated at around $90 million and a domestic marketing budget of $45 million, according to Deadline.
The box office struggle was highlighted more when Lionsgate posted a $94 million net loss in its most recent quarter, as Variety highlighted. However, the company released the Apple TV+ series The Studio this quarter, which led to its television side doubling profits. This factor put even more of a spotlight on its two film releases, Ballerina and Another Simple Favor.
Now, where the strange part comes in is when you look at Ballerina's glowing reviews, especially from fans.
The movie is "certified fresh" on Rotten Tomatoes and boasts an impressive 92 percent rating on the fan-focused Popcornmeter, featuring more than 5,000 verified reviews. Critics also gave it high marks, as Ballerina scored a 76 percent score on that side, based on 299 reviews.
Although that's just one review site, it's the largest sample size, and the fan reviews echo what most said on social media in the days and weeks following Ballerina's release date of June 6.'Peacemaker' Actor Takes Aim at 'John Wick' Spin-off 'Ballerina' After Box Office Flop first appeared on Men's Journal on Aug 10, 2025
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Ben Folds on the depth of the new ‘Snoopy Presents' animated musical and why he left Trump's Kennedy Center
Ben Folds on the depth of the new ‘Snoopy Presents' animated musical and why he left Trump's Kennedy Center

Los Angeles Times

time12 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Ben Folds on the depth of the new ‘Snoopy Presents' animated musical and why he left Trump's Kennedy Center

Snoopy is the superstar of the 'Peanuts' world, but Ben Folds is loyal to Charlie Brown. 'I'm going to have to go with Chuck because he's so emotionally compressed,' the singer-songwriter said when asked for a favorite. Folds didn't grow up poring over the Charles M. Schulz comics or memorizing the TV specials — 'I can't think of anything I really was a fan of outside of music' — but he loved Vince Guaraldi's music for the animated specials. He started studying Charlie Brown and the gang when he was hired to write the title song for 'It's the Small Things, Charlie Brown,' sung by Charlie's sister Sally in the 2022 Apple TV special. And he recently dove back into the world of these iconic characters when he returned to write the final three songs for 'Snoopy Presents: A Summer Musical.' 'I think it's good that I came to fully appreciate the world of 'Peanuts' as an adult,' says Folds, although he adds that he was still starstruck about writing for Charlie Brown. 'It's a lot of responsibility,' he says. 'I was asking the Schulz family, 'Can I say this?' and they'd say, 'Yes, it's yours.'' Folds' best-known songs, such as 'Brick,' 'Song for the Dumped,' 'Army,' 'Rockin' the Suburbs' and 'Zak and Sara,' may seem too sardonic or dark for the sweet world of Snoopy and company. But he sees it differently. 'There's a lot of deep stuff there. 'Peanuts,' like 'Mister Rogers,' presents an empathetic and nuanced, not dumbed-down view of the world, and that is rare for kids programming,' he says. 'I was able to say stuff in my songs that kids will understand but that will go over the heads of many adults.' He also knows how to approach the storytelling aspect of musical writing pragmatically. Within the show's parameters, Folds is grateful to the creators for giving him his artistic freedom. 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Folds has recently also tried countering the turmoil of our current era: Last year he released his first Christmas album, 'Sleigher,' and his 2023 album 'What Matters Most' opens with 'But Wait, There's More,' which offers political commentary but then talks about believing in the good of humankind, and closes with the uplifting 'Moments.' And obviously, Folds knows that a show that stars a beagle and a small yellow bird that defies classification is not the right place to get bogged down in the issues of the day. Even when the lyrics dip into melancholy waters, they find a positive place to land. 'In this era I don't want the art that passes through my world to not have some semblance of hope,' he says.

Denzel Washington and Spike Lee Reunite for ‘Highest 2 Lowest'—Here's How to Watch
Denzel Washington and Spike Lee Reunite for ‘Highest 2 Lowest'—Here's How to Watch

Elle

time13 hours ago

  • Elle

Denzel Washington and Spike Lee Reunite for ‘Highest 2 Lowest'—Here's How to Watch

Every item on this page was chosen by an ELLE editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy. Spike Lee and Denzel Washington reunite for the fifth time in Highest 2 Lowest, a modern reimagining of Akira Kurosawa's revered 1963 thriller High and Low. Set in present-day New York, Lee casts Washington as David King, a music mogul pulled into a high-stakes ransom plot. Today's theatrical release arrives after the film premiered at Cannes Film Festival, where it earned a six-minute standing ovation (and a rare Rihanna red carpet appearance). This marks Washington and Lee's first film together since 2006's Inside Man, a collaboration Washington says was built on deep mutual trust. 'There was only one person to do this. And I'm sitting next to him,' the actor recently told Vanity Fair. Lee approached the project as 'a jazz reinterpretation of a great film,' adding, 'I knew if I was to do this, it had to be a reimagining. And it was right up my alley—a big, fat, juicy one coming down the middle of the plate. And I feel like I knocked it out.' Washington sees the project as long overdue in his career. 'In [most of] the time I've been an actor, I wouldn't even have been allowed to play a part like this. No white directors were hiring us, and no studios were hiring us,' he told Vanity Fair. 'That's why I called Spike. I trust Spike, and he trusts me.' Lee hopes audiences catch the film on the biggest screen possible. 'No matter how big that TV on the wall in your home is, see it in theaters first,' he says. Washington added, 'In the theaters, in the theaters, in the theaters. I'll keep saying August 15.' Not yet, but soon. After debuting in theaters today, the film will land on Apple TV+ on Sept. 5, 2025, just 19 days later. Until then, you'll need to catch it during its theatrical run. Take it from Lee—it's worth seeing on the big screen. GET TICKETS

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