Box office Allegiant grossed $66.2 million in North America and $113.1 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $179.2 million. It earned the lowest previews among the series, with $2.35 million from 2,800 theaters. On its opening day, it made $11.9 million (including previews), down 43.6% from
Insurgent, becoming the first film in the series to fail to open with over $20 million. Scott Mendelson of
Forbes compared the decline in opening day to the third installment of
The Chronicles of Narnia film series,
Voyage of the Dawn Treader, which had a similar amount of drop. In comparison, the
third Hunger Games film,
Mockingjay – Part 1, fell only 21% from its
previous film.
Lionsgate president of domestic distribution Richard Fay labeled the opening "pretty solid". Due to
Allegiant's poor box-office resulting in Lionsgate's stock declining 3.3% by 72 cents to $21.13 in trading,
Moody's Investors Service lowered Lionsgate's Speculative Grade Liquidity rating from SGL-2 to SGL-3.
The Divergent Series: Allegiant also struggled internationally where Lionsgate does not have operations in most countries and sells distribution rights to partners. and will receive a scattered release worldwide. Unlike its predecessor
Insurgent, Lionsgate decided not to have a day and date release for
Allegiant, instead intending to take advantage of various school holidays in international markets, and at the same time avoid competition with Walt Disney's animated
Zootopia.
Allegiant took the top spot in its opening day in France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Sweden. It added 32 markets in its second weekend, earning a total of $22 million from 77 countries, which is down 13%. The top openings were in France ($5 million), Brazil ($2.7 million), the United Kingdom and Ireland ($2.6 million), Mexico ($2.5 million). It had a very unsuccessful opening in South Korea with $523,000 from 392 screens. In China, it opened in third place behind
The Angry Birds Movie and
Captain America: Civil War with $10.8 million. As a result, it helped the film cross the $100 million mark internationally and immediately became the film's second biggest market behind Italy only. In terms of total earnings, its largest markets are China ($18.7 million), France ($15.1 million), followed by Brazil ($6.9 million), the U.K. ($6.5 million), Russia ($6 million) and Spain ($5.1 million). Many critics have blamed the underperformance of the film on Lionsgate's decision to split the last novel into two pictures. Due to the box office struggles of
Allegiant, Lionsgate had planned to wrap up the film series with a television movie with a prospective television series spinoff. Made on a total budget of $183.6 million, including net production budget, advertising and promotion costs, and domestic home entertainment costs,
Deadline Hollywood projected the film to make a mere profit of $3.5 million should it earn a net total of $187.1 million from various platforms (including theatrical revenues, TV rights and DVD sales). By comparison,
Divergent made a net profit of $71.8 million and
Insurgent $30.6 million. By contrast,
The Hollywood Reporter estimated the film lost the studio around $50 million, when factoring together all expenses and revenues.
Critical response The Divergent Series: Allegiant was met with negative responses by critics, who criticized the lack of originality, character advancements, visual effects, and the decision to split the film into two parts. On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 11%, based on 199 reviews, with an average rating of 4.10/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "
Allegiant improves on previous entries in
The Divergent Series on a few superficial levels, but they aren't enough to counteract a sense of growing boredom with a franchise that's gone on too long."
Metacritic gives the film a score of 33 out of 100, based on 33 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale. Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone gave the film a 1/4 stars, stating that "
The Divergent Series: Allegiant is another one of those cynical Hollywood cash grabs that takes the third book in bestselling juvie-lit trilogy (see
Twilight and
The Hunger Games) and stretches that last book into two movies so audiences are tricked into paying twice for egregiously padded piffle".
Cast and crew response Shailene Woodley expressed disappointment with the quality of
Allegiant, claiming that she almost quit acting following the decline of the franchise; co-star
Zoë Kravitz voiced similar concerns about the direction of
Allegiant and the direction of the series as a whole, saying, "I think as we went on, the story really kinda got lost and nobody really knew what we were doing anymore". Producer
Neil Burger (who directed the first film in the franchise) criticized Lionsgate's decision to split the film into two parts.
Accolades ==Future==