Audiences are lovingThe Little Mermaid. A live-action remake of the animated Disney film,The Little Mermaidmade its premiere in movie theaters this weekend, and a look at the audience scores show that filmgoers are loving it. Upon its debut, the remake has been given a grade ofAonCinemaScore, which polls filmgoers on opening night to calculate a letter grade for any given film. It’s very rare for any movie to score that perfect A+, but an A is pretty close, matching fellow animated filmThe Super Mario Bros. Movie, which audiences have also been giving high praise.
Over at Rotten Tomatoes, reviews from the critics are fairly mixed but more on the positive side. The film has an approval rating of 67% on the Tomatometer, making it fresh but not without its complaints. Meanwhile, the audience score is much higher, ranking at 95%, which suggests that almost everyone who watched the film and graded it was pretty satisfied. That is also reminiscent ofThe Super Mario Bros. Movie, which technically has a rotten score of 59% while its audience score is 96%.

“With Halle Bailey making a major splash in the title role, Disney’s live-actionLittle Mermaidranks among the studio’s most enjoyable reimaginings,” Rotten Tomatoes' critics consensus reads.
Related:The Little Mermaid Hair Department Head Reveals the High Cost of Halle Bailey’s Ariel Hair
The Little Mermaid Is Swimming to Box Office Success
There’s a lot of financial success achieved byThe Little Mermaidas well. It is eyeing an opening of a whopping $125 million over the four-day holiday weekend, pulling in $38 million on Friday. That follows over $10 million in previews with filmgoers expected to keep the theaters filled for screenings of the movie throughout the weekend and into Memorial Day. When we couple this with the high audience scores, it’s clear thatThe Little Mermaidis a hit. A closer look at the reviews also suggests that star Halle Bailey is who shines most brightly with the reviewers and audiences, as she has garnered some very high praise for her performance and singing abilities.
“The thing about Ariel that’s so tricky is that you’re asking for so many things,” directorRob Marshall has said of casting Baileyin that role. “You’re asking for innocence and vulnerability, but strength at the same time. Strong-willed, almost bullheaded kind of character who sees what they want and goes to get it. But there had to be joy from her, and Halle had all of that.”
Marshall added, “She was the first actor we saw for the film, the first one. And then we saw everybody else. She set the bar so high, and nobody surpassed that bar. We did a screen test with her, and it was just, well, this is it. I went immediately to Bob Iger with the screen test, and within minutes he said, yes, of course. She’s Ariel.”
The Little Mermaidis now playing in movie theaters. Along with Bailey, the film stars Melissa McCarthy, Jonah Hauer-King, Javier Bardem, Awkwafina, Jacob Tremblay, and Daveed Diggs.