Ben-Hur derailed  at the multiplexes this weekend, as the latest attempt to revive the chariot racing epic opened to an anemic $11.4 million. That’s a disastrous result for the $100 million production, putting Ben-Hur in the ranks of the summer’s biggest flops.

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Paramount co-produced the remake of Lew Wallace’s novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ; the book was the basis for the 1959 blockbuster that followed Charlton Heston into the arena.

“This is the bomb of the summer,” said Jeff Bock, a box office analyst with Exhibitor Relations. “They went big and they went home.”

They went big and they went home

The studio has had a bad streak at the box office of late, fielding duds such as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows and Zoolander 2. Its parent company, Viacom, has been engulfed in an epic corporate struggle pitting CEO Philippe Dauman over the Redstone family, the media conglomerate’s controlling stakeholders. That issue, at least, is moving towards a resolution, as Viacom announced this weekend that Dauman was stepping down from atop the company and will be replaced on an interim basis by COO Thomas Dooley.

Ben-Hur’s backers aggressively courted the Christian community, doing outreach to pastors and holding taste-maker screenings for religious leaders. The studios also hoped that producers Mark Burnett and Roma Downey, who earned devout points with Son of God and the miniseries The Bible, would help them turn out values audiences. Instead, Ben-Hur trailed the $47 million debut of Noah and the $24 million launch of Exodus: Gods and Kings, two recent Biblical epics that lacked a heavenly touch.

Ben-Hur drew a crowd that was 51 per cent female and 94 per cent over the age of 25. It also did well in the South and Southwest, areas that are more religious, but did not do as well in more secular regions of the country such as the Northeast and the West Coast.

The film could get a lift from overseas’ crowds. Ben-Hur picked up $10.7 million in roughly a third of the global markets. Sources believe it could ultimately gross $100 million in foreign territories, which wouldn’t be enough to make its investors whole, but should stop some of the bleeding.

With Ben-Hur faltering, Suicide Squad managed to snag first place for the third consecutive weekend. The story of a band of super villains netted $20.7 million, pushing the Warner Bros. release’s domestic total to $262.3 million. Not adjusted for inflation, the film is the second-highest grossing stateside release of Will Smith’s career, behind Independence Day’s $306.2 million haul.

“We’re in great shape,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros. distribution executive vice president. “We’re well on our way to $300 million domestically.”

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