"Melania" Documentary Scores Big at Box Office But Flops With Critics

The documentary "Melania," focusing on the U.S. First Lady, opened to an estimated $7 million at the North American box office, ranking third for the weekend. Despite its strong commercial start and an "A" CinemaScore from audiences, it was savaged by critics, receiving only a 10% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The film, directed by Brett Ratner, is reported to be one of the most expensive documentaries ever made, with $40 million for distribution rights and $35 million for marketing. Ticket sales revealed a stark political divide, with strong turnout in conservative regions and much less in liberal urban centers.

Key Points: Melania Trump Doc Earns $7M, Gets 10% on Rotten Tomatoes

  • Ranked 3rd in weekend box office
  • Critics gave 10% on Rotten Tomatoes
  • Cost $75M for rights & marketing
  • Audience divided along political lines
  • Brett Ratner's first film in 12 years
2 min read

US first lady documentary 'Melania' receives mixed views on opening

The "Melania" documentary had a strong $7M box office opening but was panned by critics, receiving only a 10% score on Rotten Tomatoes.

"Loved By All -- A CinemaScore - Melania Trump on X"

Los Angeles, Feb 2

"Melania," the documentary about US First Lady Melania Trump, enjoyed a strong opening, ranking third in the weekend box office in North America, but received poor reviews from film critics.

Directed by Brett Ratner, "Melania" follows the 20 days leading up to President Donald Trump's second inauguration. Supporters of the first couple propelled it to an estimated 7 million US dollars in box office revenue -- an unusually high figure for a documentary, reports Xinhua news agency.

The showing is projected to make "Melania" the best-performing documentary of its type in roughly a decade, which the first lady celebrated on X, with a boast: Loved By All -- "A" CinemaScore.

However, film critics gave it approval ratings of only 6 per cent on Metacritic and 10 per cent on Rotten Tomatoes, meaning that no more than ten out of 100 critics thought positively of the documentary.

It is Ratner's first feature in 12 years, after returning to filmmaking following multiple sexual harassment allegations that he denied and which did not result in criminal charges.

The movie still faces a steep climb to commercial success. Amazon MGM Studios spent 40 million US dollars for distribution rights and 35 million US dollars on marketing, pushing The Hollywood Reporter, a major Hollywood industry magazine, to label it "the most expensive documentary" ever made.

Amazon has rejected that narrative, saying it licensed the project simply because it believed audiences would respond.

Ticket sales have mirrored the nation's familiar political divide, with strong turnout in conservative regions and far less enthusiasm in liberal urban centres.

Nearly 75 per cent of the audience was white, followed by Hispanic viewers, who accounted for 11 per cent of ticket buyers, according to Variety, a top Hollywood trade publication.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
$75 million total cost for a documentary?! That's over 600 crore rupees! You could make hundreds of meaningful Indian documentaries with that budget. The economics of Hollywood never cease to amaze.
A
Aman W
The political divide in ticket sales is the real story here. It's not about the film, it's about showing support for a political figure. Reminds me of how some biopics are received here during election season.
S
Sarah B
With respect, giving a platform to a director with multiple harassment allegations, regardless of legal outcome, sends a poor message. The content and the creator's background both matter. Could have chosen a different filmmaker.
V
Vikram M
"Loved By All" with a 6% critic score is quite a statement! 😂 The First Lady's social media team is working hard. In the end, the box office numbers are what the studio will care about most, just like our Bollywood producers.
K
Karthik V
The audience demographic breakdown is telling. Nearly 75% white. It seems the film is preaching to the converted rather than reaching a wider, diverse audience. A missed opportunity to tell a more universal story.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50