Weekend Box Office - September 3-6, 2010 |
Written by US Townhall staff
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Tuesday, 07 September 2010 18:23 |
With the three-day Labor Day weekend concluded, the Summer movie season that began back in May is officially over. As usual for this time of year, none of the new releases wowed at the box office, but George Clooney's latest, The American, nabbed the top spot with $16.6 million. Factoring in the box office from its early debut on Wednesday, and its domestic total stands at $19.8 million.
Machete, starring Danny Trejo, did okay with a $14.1 million opening, while Drew Barrymore's latest romantic comedy, Going the Distance, underwhelmed in fifth place with an $8.5 million three-day take. Distance's production budget, at $32 million, was actually larger than that of either The American or Machete, making its mediocre debut all the more disappointing.
Among holdovers, Takers increased its lead over last week's fellow opener, The Last Exorcism, falling a smaller than normal 34% in its second weekend and lifting its domestic total to about $40 million. Despicable Me, this summer's surprise animated hit increased its box office by 41.5% and leaped back into the top 12 based on, we suspect, being released on the budget theater circuit.
We'll be back later in the week for our Summer Movie Season wrap up of winners and losers.
Here are the domestic box office actuals for the weekend of September 3-6, 2010:
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Weekend Box Office - August 27-29, 2010 |
Written by US Townhall staff
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Sunday, 29 August 2010 20:01 |
All five of last week's new releases crashed during their second weeks on the charts, while older entries, The Expendables, Eat Pray Love, and The Other Guys held better, and rounded out the top 5 with the two main new releases. In a photo-finish, Takers squeaked past The Last Exorcism by less than $200,000 to nab the pole position. Outside of the Fast and the Furious franchise, actor Paul Walker has never exactly been a huge box office draw, and Takers is pretty much on par with his stronger openings – that is, on the low side for an action flick. The Last Exorcism, Hollywood's latest attempt to score another Exorcist-like hit has met the same fate as every other attempt since the original: relative indifference on the part of the mass audience. As for the aforementioned The Expendables, no Stallone movie (we don't count Spy Kids 3D: Game Over) has made over $100 million at the North American box office in 25 years. Could The Expendables break the curse? It's going to be close and very interesting to watch.
Next week, three more dumped movies open, none of which is likely to take in significantly more than $20 million in its opening: George Clooney's The Last American, Drew Barrymore's Going the Distance, and The Machete starring Danny Trejo.
Here are the domestic box office actuals for the weekend of August 27-29, 2010:
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Weekend Box Office - August 20-22, 2010 |
Written by US Townhall staff
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Sunday, 22 August 2010 17:57 |
Despite slipping a full 51% from its opening weekend, Sylvester Stallone's box office comeback, The Expendables, outgunned and outmuscled no less than five new releases this past weekend to hold on to the number one slot. As is usual for the mid-August dumping ground season, all of these five debuting flicks were dead on arrival, but fortunately for the studios, they were mostly cheaply-made fare. Really not much more to say about this.
This Friday, only two new releases are opening in wide release: the horror flick, The Last Exorcism and the action caper, Takers, starring Paul Walker.
Here are the box office actuals for the weekend of August 20-22, 2010:
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Weekend Box Office - August 13-15, 2010 |
Written by US Townhall staff
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Sunday, 15 August 2010 18:16 |
The Expendables proved to have the most firepower among this weekend's debuts as the Sylvester Stallone written and directed action flick powered its way to the number one slot. The Expendables, which was independently financed, reportedly cost Lionsgate Films about $20 million for the rights to distribute, making this a wise investment on its part. Julia Roberts' latest, Eat Pray Love, managed an okay beginning at over $23 million, good enough for second. However, the latest indie comic to be brought to the big screen, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, faltered, coming in fifth place with a subpar $10.6 million in spite of being squarely marketed to the Playstation generation with a story that somewhat mirrored a video game itself. Last week's openers, The Other Guys and Step Up 3D, each fell more than 50% in their second weekends.
August is typically the month where a lot of not-quite blockbusters are dumped as the back-to-school season begins, and this Friday's five new releases will likely continue that trend and underwhelm at the box office. They include Lottery Ticket, Nanny McPhee Returns, Piranha 3D, The Switch, and Vampires Suck. Still, all that overcrowding will undoubtedly cut heavily into the second week tallys of this week's debuts.
Here are the box office actuals for the weekend of August 13-15, 2010:
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Weekend Box Office - August 6-8, 2010 |
Written by US Townhall staff
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Sunday, 08 August 2010 21:04 |
After three weeks at the top spot, Christopher Nolan's Inception has been dethroned by the Will Ferrell / Mark Wahlberg action comedy, The Other Guys, coming as a surprise to no one. The other new entrant, Step Up 3D, had the weakest debut among the trilogy in spite of its appearing in the more costly 3D theaters. The first Step Up, starring a then-relatively unknown Channing Tatum, was a surprise hit, grossing over $114 million worldwide on a $12 million production budget. 2008's Step Up 2: The Streets actually fared better, even with Tatum appearing in just a cameo, amassing almost $150 million globally. While Step Up 3D only made $5 million less in its opening weekend than the first did, it is audience attendance that truly tells the story here. A full 81% of its box office came from the more expensive 3D theaters meaning that there was a significant dropoff in audience from the first two movies to this latest, and possibly final, film in the series.
None of last week's three debuts held well in their second weeks. Dinner for Schmucks proved to be a schlemiel and tumbled almost 56% percent, while Charlie St. Cloud proved to be a one-week wonder and plunged 62%. In better news, the animated hits Despicable Me and Toy Story 3 continued to do well, with Toy Story closing in on $400 million domestically.
This Friday, three quite different and interesting movies debut. It would be a surprise if the weekend didn't belong to Julia Roberts and Eat Pray Love, but Scott Pilgrim vs. the World has all the potential of becoming a break out surprise hit. This is one to keep an eye on as pre-release buzz and a successful promo at the recent San Diego Comic-Con may turn this relatively obsure comic into a dark horse favorite. The other new release, The Expendables, stars a cast that, quite frankly, Hollywood has found expendable in recent years including Sylvester Stallone and Dolph Lundgren. Stallone also directed and co-wrote the script. Not only that, but Arnold Schwarzenegger makes his triumphant return to acting in this action flick. What more can we say?
Here are the box office actuals for the weekend of August 6-8, 2010:
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