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Wkd Box Office 01•16-18•15 - Rocket Raccoon tak3's top spot, rips out bear's heart

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xaosslug

Member
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tomatometer:
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73% American Sniper
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33% The Wedding Ringer
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98% Paddington
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10% Taken 3
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99% Selma
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32% Blackhat

metacritic:





*click pic(s) for source*

‘American Sniper’ Shatters Records With $90.2 Million Weekend

“American Sniper” hit the bullseye, earning an astonishing $90.2 million in its debut weekend.

It is now on pace to decimate records for the Martin Luther King holiday and for the month of January, pulling in roughly $105 million over the four-day period. It’s also a new high-water mark for director Clint Eastwood, whose previous weekend record was the $29.5 million wide-release opening for 2008’s “Gran Torino.” At 84, he’s still got it.

“The movie has become a cultural phenomenon,” said Dan Fellman, Warner Bros. head of domestic distribution. “It tore apart the record book and not by a little. By an enormous amount.”

“American Sniper,” recently picked up Oscar nods for Best Picture and Best Actor for star Bradley Cooper, and the awards buzz only intensified interest in the film. The war drama was co-produced and co-financed by Village Roadshow for less than $60 million. Early projections had pegged a wide-release debut in the $40 million range.

What was amazing about “American Sniper” is that despite dealing with the unpopular Iraq War and such depressing topics as post-traumatic stress disorder, it put up numbers similar to a blockbuster, summer release.

Analysts likened the opening to “Guardians of the Galaxy,” which shattered expectations because of the endorsements it received on social media platforms. By debuting in a handful of theaters on Christmas, “American Sniper” was able to build support organically.

“This is unprecedented,” said Phil Contrino, vice president and chief analyst at BoxOffice.com. “In the climate we live in, word-of-mouth can push a movie really far, really fast.”

“American Sniper” also benefited from its 332 IMAX screenings, where it is expected to generate $11.5M for the four-day weekend and enjoyed the format’s biggest ever R-rated opening.

“American Sniper” wasn’t the only record-breaker. Sony and Screen Gems’ “The Wedding Ringer,” starring Kevin Hart as a best man for hire, is looking to be the number one R-rated comedy opening for the month of January.

The film will earned $21 million for the weekend and should pick up $25 million for the four-day holiday. Those numbers are good news for a film that cost $23 million to produce. It also keeps Hart’s box office roll going following his success in recent hits such as “Ride Along” and “Think Like a Man.”

“Kevin Hart really is that guy that everybody wants to hang with,” said Rory Bruer, Sony Pictures president of worldwide distribution. “Not only is he always funny, but he’s that guy that you want to sit down and have a beer with. He exudes charisma.”

Bruer said he was particularly pleased that the film didn’t get swept aside by “American Sniper,” particularly because both pictures are R-rated.

“It’s a victory for the ‘The Wedding Ringer’ this weekend with this R-rated juggernaut in the marketplace,” he added.

The Weinstein Co.’s “Paddington” opened to $19.3 million from 3,303 screens for the weekend and a third-place finish. By Monday, however, it could supplant “The Wedding Ringer” as the holiday’s second highest grossing film as it is also expected to earn roughly $25 million over the four-day period. The Weinstein Company picked up U.S. distribution rights from StudioCanal, which financed the $55 million adaptation of Michael Bond’s beloved series about a talking bear with a penchant for marmalade sandwiches.

The film is set up nicely when it comes to competition for the family dollar. It has the market more or less to itself until “The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water” debuts on Feb. 6.

“The parents like it just as much as the kids and getting some adult business is always a good sign with films like this,” said Erik Lomis, distribution chief for the Weinstein Company.

“American Sniper’s” success was bad news for the weekend’s other adult drama, “Blackhat.” Michael Mann’s look at the way we hack now with Chris Hemsworth trading in Thor’s hammer for a keyboard, flopped. It earned a doleful $4 million from 2,567 locations for the weekend and should make $4.6 million over the holiday. That’s a dreadful result for the $70 million production and the worst of Mann’s career. It’s lower even than the modest $10 million the studio projected “Blackhat” would pull in over the four-day period.

Legendary Pictures backed the film, with Universal distributing. The filmmakers will now look abroad in order to stem some of that red ink.

“We wish the film would have found a bigger audience,” said Nick Carpou, Universal’s president of domestic distribution. “We think that based on the director and Chris Hemsworth that it’s got strong international appeal.”

The top five was rounded out by holdovers, “Taken 3″ and “Selma.” Liam Neeson’s latest vigilante flick fell sharply in its sophomore frame, dropping more than 60% to earn $14 million over the weekend and bringing its total to $62.8 million.

Despite being snubbed in several major Oscar categories, Paramount Pictures’ “Selma” capitalized on the Martin Luther King holiday, earning $8.3 million. It should earn $10.3 million over the four-day period. The Civil Rights drama has made nearly $28 million since premiering in limited release on Christmas.

Among Oscar contenders, “The Imitation Game” benefited from its eight nominations, earning $7.2 million and bringing its total to more than $50 million. It will expand from 1,611 locations to more than 2,500 next weekend. The Weinstein Company, which is distributing the film, says the biopic of code-breaker Alan Turing is performing better than “The King’s Speech” did at a similar point in its release schedule. A gross of $100 million or more seems possible.

In limited release, “Still Alice” sought to capitalize on Julianne Moore’s Golden Globe win for best actress. The film debuted on 12 screens after having a brief Oscar qualifying run. The drama about a college professor with Alzheimer’s disease earned $212,432, for a per screen average of $17,703.

The success of “American Sniper” helped push the holiday weekend to new highs, lifting the overall box office up more than 13% over last year’s numbers. This year is expected to shatter records thanks to sequels to films such as “Star Wars” and “The Avengers,” and, it would seem, a gritty war drama from Clint Eastwood.

“What a great way to kick off the box office,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Rentrak. “If this is going to end up as the first $11 billion year in history, it’s going to be because of weekends like this and unexpected performances like ‘American Sniper.'”


*click pic for full list/source*


*click pic for full list/source*
 

kswiston

Member
I know this thread will almost exclusively focus on American Sniper, but The Wedding Ringer did very well for its type/budget of film. The Kevin Hart train won't be stopping in 2015.
 

Mr.Swag

Banned
Blackhat chose a really bad week to release

Edit: I was thinking American Sniper was going to be. .a success for sure, but never like this. At most I would have predicted a $60 million opening.
Not fucking $90
 

kswiston

Member
Still not sure what's more surprising...AS's ow, or Paddington's rt score?

Paddington's critic average is 7.8/10 on Rottentomatoes, which isn't particularly high. Animated films tend to get better RT scores, because if don't right there isn't much to object to. A 3/5 typically counts as a fresh review on Rotten Tomatoes, so more polarizing films will get lower scores even if their average is similar.
 

Maledict

Member
So it looks like Guardains managed it - mockingjay has dropped completely off the charts now, 2 million short of Guardians domestic take.

Interesting, Interstellar is still at position 21. This doesn't surprise me - my sister is staying for the weekend and as she hasn't been to an Imax before I booked tickets for this morning. Couldn't get any for last night as was sold out, and at 10:45 this morning the cinema was packed. Theyve upped the number of showings again and it's now showing more than the Hobbit, a film that came out over a month later. Interstellar seems to have amazing legs at the Imax.
 
So it looks like Guardains managed it - mockingjay has dropped completely off the charts now, 2 million short of Guardians domestic take.

That's really weird. It made 4 mil last weekend. I can't imagine Lionsgate would have pulled it (or let it be pulled) from theaters with a decent amount of money still on the table.

Did it actually leave theaters after last weekend? This has gotta be an error.
 

Matt_

World's #1 One Direction Fan: Everyone else in the room can see it, everyone else but you~~~
I know this thread will almost exclusively focus on American Sniper, but The Wedding Ringer did very well for its type/budget of film. The Kevin Hart train won't be stopping in 2015.

baffled as to his appeal
every time i've seen anything of him he just comes across as obnoxious
 

kswiston

Member
So it looks like Guardains managed it - mockingjay has dropped completely off the charts now, 2 million short of Guardians domestic take.

Interesting, Interstellar is still at position 21. This doesn't surprise me - my sister is staying for the weekend and as she hasn't been to an Imax before I booked tickets for this morning. Couldn't get any for last night as was sold out, and at 10:45 this morning the cinema was packed. Theyve upped the number of showings again and it's now showing more than the Hobbit, a film that came out over a month later. Interstellar seems to have amazing legs at the Imax.

Mockingjay just hasn't been updated. It made close to $500k on Friday, which means that it won't pass Guardians this weekend, but probably will by the end of next weekend. It's starting to see heavier drops in light of more competition though, so I am not sure if Mockingjay will still hit $340M.
 

Ridley327

Member
Biggest surprise is Blackhat. What happened?

A combination of bad trailers, decidedly mixed-to-negative WOM, Hemsworth being an unproven lead outside of Marvel films, and Mann coming off of a generally disliked film in Public Enemies. As much as I liked the film, there was no way it wasn't going to flop, even if I didn't think it was going to flop this hard.
 
So it looks like Guardains managed it - mockingjay has dropped completely off the charts now, 2 million short of Guardians domestic take.
That can't be right. For it to go from 2000 screens last week to zero this week? It has to be a mistake on BOM

EDIT: beaten
 
Biggest surprise is Blackhat. What happened?
Bad week, plus the marketing didn't sell it (possibly because there is nothing to sell). It looked incredibly generic, not something you rush to see in the theater on opening weekend, but something you watch on TNT in 2017.
 

Surface of Me

I'm not an NPC. And neither are we.
ayy lmao blackhat

At first I was surprised that American Sniper made that much in 4 weeks, and did a triple take when I saw the weekend gross, wtf?

limited release until this weekend. for all intents and purposes, this was opening weekend for it
 

kswiston

Member
Bad week, plus the marketing didn't sell it (possibly because there is nothing to sell). It looked incredibly generic, not something you rush to see in the theater on opening weekend, but something you watch on TNT in 2017.

I don't think you can blame its failure on American Sniper. It couldn't even beat the 4th weekend of Unbroken, so we aren't just talking about competition for audience. People didn't give a shit about the film's release, and probably would have continued to not give a shit if American Sniper opened next weekend instead of this weekend.
 

Ridley327

Member
I don't think you can blame its failure on American Sniper. It couldn't even beat the 4th weekend of Unbroken, so we aren't just talking about competition for audience. People didn't give a shit, and probably would have continued to not give a shit if American Sniper opened next weekend instead of this weekend.

It's worth mentioning that Blackhat had been locked into this release date long before American Sniper got dated for limited release on Xmas day, let alone its wide expansion. Universal had a long time to sell it to audiences, and they failed rather miserably.
 

kruis

Exposing the sinister cartel of retailers who allow companies to pay for advertising space.
Blackhat is going to be a finacial bomb.$70 million dollar budget, $4 million gross in the first week, .Ouch.
 

vinnygambini

Why are strippers at the U.N. bad when they're great at strip clubs???
Blackhat - no pulse

This will most likely be Legendary Pictures 2nd flop in less than 2 months (Second Son + Blackhat) - dayum

Wedding Wringer did good too - I enjoyed the film
 

kswiston

Member
American Sniper could easily become the biggest domestic film of 2014, despite making 99% of its money in 2015.

Let that sink in.

The second part doesn't mean much, as that has happened several times, if not quite to this extent. But the fact that American Sniper could realistically take the domestic crown (depending on legs of course) would be one of the biggest box office upsets in years.
 
I rememeber making a thread about AS, and it promptly got deleted. I have no idea why.

Saw it 3 weeks ago and thought it was amazing. I was trying to spread the word
 
90 million for American Sniper? Holy shit. That's... more than Nolan made on opening weekend for both Inception and Interstellar.

Shame it wasn't for a better movie.
 

Ridley327

Member
Blackhat - no pulse

This will most likely be Legendary Pictures 2nd flop in less than 2 months (Second Son + Blackhat) - dayum

Wedding Wringer did good too - I enjoyed the film

It still amuses me that both Seventh Son and Jupiter Ascending are out on the same day. It's like the powers that be at Hollywood are giving audiences a bye week.
 
Bad week, plus the marketing didn't sell it (possibly because there is nothing to sell). It looked incredibly generic, not something you rush to see in the theater on opening weekend, but something you watch on TNT in 2017.


It looks like Die Hard 4 with Michael Mann cinematography.
 
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