World Entertainment

Pinkett Smith spills the beans on Girls Trip

'Black girl magic is real - people want a piece of it,' says director Malcolm D Lee
Female-driven comedy Girls Trip exceeded all expectations at the US box office when it was released last weekend - a fact its star Jada Pinkett Smith puts down to the power of laughter.

It made $31.2m (£23.9m) in its first three days, following behind Christopher Nolan's war epic Dunkirk which took $50.5m (£38.8m). That makes it the biggest opening weekend for any live-action comedy this year.

The film follows the story of four lifelong friends who re-unite for a weekend getaway in New Orleans.

The fact it's an R-rated comedy fronted by four women makes its success even sweeter for Pinkett Smith and co-stars Queen Latifah, Regina Hall and newcomer Tiffany Haddish.

"Laughter is universal, people love to laugh," Pinkett Smith told the BBC, commenting on the film's success.

"One woman is every woman and the themes in the film are universal, even though we could be different ages and experience different things."

'Black girl magic'

She said she was delighted to see women of all races enjoying the film, adding: "As women, the things we care about and some of the things happening in our lives will be similar and that is the success of the movie."

Girls Trip seems to have broken the R-rated curse following a summer of disappointing comedy films.

Will Ferrell and Amy Poehler's The House, about a couple that starts an underground casino to put their daughter through university, opened to just short of $9m (£7m).

Baywatch also drowned over a public holiday weekend taking $18m (£13.8m) and a few weeks before that, Amy Schumer and Goldie Hawn's Snatched was considered a box office flop with its $19.5m (£15m) opening.

The last R-rated comedy to have been a worldwide sensation was The Hangover in 2009, which earned $45m (£34.5m) in its opening weekend in the US and $467m (£359m) worldwide.

L to R: Tiffany Yaddish, Jada Pinkett Smith, Regina Hall and Queen Latifah in Girls Trip

Director Malcolm D Lee puts it down to a little sprinkle of what he calls "black girl magic".

"Black girl magic is real - people want a piece of it, they want to see it, they want to be empowered by it," he told The Hollywood Reporter.

Another film that was praised for its black girl magic was Oscar-nominated Hidden Figures, which told the story of a team of female African-American mathematicians who served a vital role in Nasa during the early years of the US space programme.

After its opening weekend in 2016, its star Taraji P Henson - wrote on Instagram as it took the number one spot at the box office: "I have been told my entire career 'black women can't open films domestically or internationally'. Well, anything is possible."

Lee also alluded to film's success in relation to his own movie saying: "Four black women can open a movie and it does not have to be about the space program.

"Hidden Figures did extremely well and I'm extremely happy for that movie to have done that - it's unprecedented - but here we are for women who exist in real life and don't get an opportunity to see themselves like this."

Greenies Arena:Source: BBC

About Jojo Green

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