‘Top Gun: Maverick’ is smashing box office, crosses $400 million mark in US

Pic- IANS

Los Angeles: The jet engines of Tom Cruise’s charm and the nostalgia quotient seem to working at full blast as Hollywood’s recent release Top Gun: Maverick has attained the Mach 10, soaring past $400 million at the US domestic box office, making it the highest-grossing movie of the year in the US.

With $401.8 million in North American ticket sales, Tom Cruise’s patriotic blockbuster has surpassed Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness ($398 million) to claim the No. 1 spot.

According to ‘Variety’, it’s only the second movie in pandemic times to cross $400 million stateside, Spider-Man: No Way Home being the first.

While the film may have clear skies in June, heavy turbulence is expected for the Tom Cruise-starrer in July as Maverick will have to fight off heavyweights like Thor: Love and Thunder (July 8), Minions: The Rise of Gru (July 1) to keep the domestic crown through 2022.

‘Variety’ further states that internationally, the sequel to 1986’s Top Gun has earned $362 million, taking its global total to a massive $783.8 million. Even by pre-Covid standards, Maverick is smashing box office expectations. Since ticket sales have stayed strong in recent weeks, industry analysts believe the film will at least cross $900 million by the end of its theatrical run and could even surpass the coveted $1 billion mark.

Top Gun: Maverick already stands as Cruise’s highest-grossing film in North America, but it’s close to becoming the actor’s biggest movie at the global box office. Mission: Impossible – Fallout, which collected $791 million worldwide in 2018, currently stands as his highest-grossing blockbuster of all time.

Top Gun: Maverick opened over Memorial Day weekend and set a holiday record, collecting $160.5 million in its first four days of release. It was the first movie in Cruise’s 40-year career to surpass $100 million in a single weekend.

Directed by Joseph Kosinski, the $170 million-budgeted Top Gun: Maverick picks up decades after the original and follows Cruise’s Pete ‘Maverick’ Mitchell as he trains a new group of aviators for a crucial assignment.

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