EXCLUSIVE: Barbenheimer begins! Barbie fever sweeps the UK today as fans hit cinemas from 8am – and one devotee even left home at midnight for the movie marathon
- Greta Gerwig’s Barie and Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer hits cinemas today
Barbie fever hit the UK today with hundreds of super fans waking up at the crack of dawn to race across the country to catch a glimpse of the first viewings of the much-anticipated films in the capital.
Greta Gerwig’s satire will go head-to-head in the global box office against Christopher Nolan’s intense drama Oppenheimer, which is about the scientist who first created the atomic bomb.
The two major titles were released simultaneously today with thousands of fans deciding to buy tickets for both shows leading to a spawning phenomenon known as Barbenheimer.
At Leicester Square movie fans gathered to watch begin their movie-marathons at the Vue Cinema, with one couple watching Oppenheimer at 4.10am still dressed in their pyjamas, while others watching Barbie reminisced of their childhoods.
Amongst them was film maker Mitch Corrigan, 22, who left his home in Somerset just after midnight today to watch the serious Oppenheimer followed by some light relief with Barbie.
Emily, 18, dressed up in Barbie-merch headed to the Vue Cinema in Leicester Square this morning to watch the first showing. She grew up playing with Barbie and to her Margot Robbie was the perfect choice to star in the film
Eager fans gathered this morning at the Vue in Leicester Square to watch Oppenheimer and Barbie. Amongst them was Mitch Corrigan (22) who woke up just after midnight to travel from Somerset for the viewing
Margot Robbie fan Aaliyah Valentine, 17, was amongst the super fans waiting to see Barbie
Greta Gerwig’s satire will go head-to-head in the global box office against Christopher Nolan’s intense drama Oppenheimer
He told MailOnline: ‘I’m inspired to see Barbie after Oppenheimer, it finished about half an hour ago.
READ MORE: Barbie fans proudly flaunt incredible pink outfits they’re donning to watch the hotly-anticipated Margot Robbie movie
‘I’m not confident it’s going to be better but it might be what I need right now. I’m in London see a little life but thought I’d come and see a few films, I’m hoping to catch Mission Impossible and another maybe.’
Mr Corrigan admitted he had ‘never gone this mental before’ with film viewings.
Aaliyah Valentine, 17, is watching Barbie as a priority before catching Oppenheimer later on today.
She said: ‘I’ve been really looking forward since I heard about the Barbie film, I was really exited because when I was younger I used to play with Barbie’s so it’s like I grew up with her.
‘I really like Margot Robbie, I’ve seen her in suicide squad and her other films so I like her as an actress.’
Simon Humphrey, 42, who works in a bookshop and is on holiday in London said: ‘I watch a lot of films and I have never seen a film be so sold out on so many screenings. I looked here (vue), Cineworld, one on Tottenham Court Road just to get a good viewing time.’
Both films spent $100 million each on production costs but are expected to rake in millions. Pictured: The Vue Cinema in Leicester Square
A cinema worker – dressed in pink – opening the doors at The Vue Cinema Leicester Square this morning
Fans up and down the country raced to buy their tickets to see one of the first showings of Gerwig’s Barbie
Emily, 18, said: ‘I have always loved Barbie, grew up playing with them and Margot Robbie is just Barbie to me. The sound track -of what I’ve heard – is really good.
‘I really like the Barbieheimer hype. Rather than pitting the two against eachother, they are all coming together and embracing it – both casts as well. Hopefully I’ll catch Oppenheimer on Sunday.’
For many Barbie fans, the film brings about feelings of nostalgia, causing them to reminisce of how their childhoods were spent playing with the much-loved dolls.
Send macarons from Edinburgh to Margot Robbie at the Barbie Set!
They are the delicate sweet treats beloved of fans of traditional afternoon teas.
But an Edinburgh macaron maker was taken aback to receive a bumper order to be served up to the stars of the new Barbie film.
Rachel Hanretty, the founder of Mademoiselle Macaron, said her staff ‘let out a little shriek’ when the order came in from Warner Brothers Studios in Hertfordshire.
The email requested 300 macarons to be delivered to the set of the movie starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling.
The French meringue confections were flavoured with rose, raspberry, orange blossom and lemon to match the doll-like colour scheme of the film.
Ms Hanretty, who trained at the Alain Ducasse cookery school in Paris, said she swore staff to secrecy last year but she has been able to go public as Barbie opens in cinemas today.
On BBC Scotland’s Lunchtime Live show, she said: ‘The delivery address was simply: Building One, Barbie Set, Warner Bros Studios. It just seems so far removed from our kitchen in Edinburgh.
‘We do sell macarons around the UK, but the fact they could have been near Ryan Gosling is something to think about.’
By Krissy Storrar
‘Every Christmas and birthday there was a Barbie and one year I was really fortunate, my dad got me the Barbie dream house,’ Emily added.
Holiday goer, 15-year-old Hazel from Texas said: ‘‘I was really stressed when I found out I wasn’t going to be in the US when Barbie came out, but I’m here.
‘ I love Margot Robbie and I’m really excited about Dua Lipa, with her song in it – I loved it when she wore the mermaid wig.
‘I had a Barbie Rapunzel when I was younger, once I tried to wash her hair – don’t do that.’
Both films are set to rake in millions after spending $100m each on production costs.
So far the Odeon has reported that more than 300 screenings have sold out for both films and predicts it will sell a million tickets in the next week alone.
Cineworld expects to enjoy its biggest weekend in terms of ticket sales for years, having already sold 200,000 in advance.
The chain has branded it the biggest opening since the record-breaking Avengers: Endgame in 2019, which brought in £276m over its first weekend alone.
Greta Gerwig’s Barbie sees Margot Robbie, 33, leading the cast as the eponymous Barbie doll alongside her boyfriend Ken, played by Ryan Gosling, 42.
The cast is a who’s who of Hollywood powerhouses, with Will Ferrell playing the CEO of Mattel, and Helen Mirren the narrator.
It follows Barbie who leaves her ‘perfect’ life as a doll and sets out to explore the complexities of being a woman in the real world.
Meanwhile Oppenheimer features an all-star cast and is led by Cillian Murphy, who plays the theoretical physicist who helped develop the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer.
The movie also boasts a stellar cast including Emily Blunt, Robert Downey Jr., and Matt Damon.
The Barbenheimer phenomenon means that the films – which are vastly different from one another – will not be competing but rather helping one another gain more ticket sales.
David A Gross, founder of Franchise Entertainment Research, added: ‘The two films are going to help each other, not compete with each other, by creating the kind of excitement we’re seeing for moviegoing in general.’
It comes as moviegoers have taken to social media today to share their excitement of seeing both films on the same day.
Tens of thousands are expected to take part in the movie marathon in what will provide a much needed boost to the industry – which has suffered a £5billion loss in the wake of the Covid pandemic.
Over the past few weeks, there has been an ongoing debate on social media as to which film should be viewed first – with many sharing their schedules for the hotly anticipated day online.
Sander Wagner, a 40-year-old researcher from Oxford University, said Barbie would be a ‘dessert’ after watching the more intense Oppenheimer.
He said: ‘Oppenheimer’s probably the more heavy movie that, from everything I’ve heard, takes a bit of digesting.
‘I think Barbie is a fun movie to watch after a drink and it works much more like a palate cleanser or dessert.’
Mr Wagner and his girlfriend will watch Oppenheimer with friends in Oxford.
‘After that, we’ll have probably one or two drinks and dinner at a bar and then we’ll head back to the movie theatre and watch the 9pm Barbie performance,’ he said.
Fellow moviegoer Matt Durrant, a 29-year-old HR manager from south-east London, shared the view that the Barbie film should be watched second.
‘I would prefer to finish off with a lighthearted thing, because the idea is that I think we’re going to go to the pub,’ he said.
Outlining his Barbenheimer plans, he said: ‘I work for one of those very lucky companies where we get Friday afternoons off in the summer so the idea is that a group of workmates are going to go to the cinema.
‘We’re trying to do it back to back. I’m not sure it’s really figured out but we hope with the timings of the ads and everything that it’ll work out.
‘I think it’s quite funny how they’re both out at the same time and I think that’s kind of part of the appeal for why we’re going to see them at the same time.
‘It’s got a lot of hype and I think lots of people just haven’t been back to the cinema since the pandemic.
‘It’s good to support the arts but also, the only thing I’ve seen since the pandemic in the cinema was the Bond film so it feels a bit like a homecoming for the cinema.’
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