Box Office Guru Wrapup: Chihuahua is Top Dog
Disney's pooch reigns supreme at the weekend box office.
This weekend a jam-packed slate of eight new films opening or expanding nationwide flooded the multiplexes but it was a pampered little dog that ticket buyers wanted turning Disney's family comedy Beverly Hills Chihuahua into the box office king. Younger-skewing movies ruled the charts while an assortment of niche pics targeting specific audiences found some success elsewhere in the top ten. Three new films opening in over 1,000 theaters each failed to even make the top ten proving that the marketplace can only handle so much content. But the variety of product did lead ticket sales well ahead of year-ago levels starting October on a positive note.
Moviegoers just couldn't resist talking animals and the Disney brand name as Beverly Hills Chihuahua delivered a powerful number one opening with an estimated $29M over the Friday-to-Sunday period. Averaging a stellar $9,020 from 3,215 locations, the PG-rated tale of a rich dog lost in Mexico connected with kids and parents and posted the best opening for a kidpic since June's WALL•E launched to $63.1M. It was the second best family film opening ever in the September-October corridor trailing only Will Smith's Shark Tale which debuted to $47.6M in October 2004. Also helping the Mouse House this weekend was the lack of good family movies over the past couple of months. The road ahead looks rosy as few options for children stand in the way of Chihuahua over the next month. Between now and the November 7 launch of the DreamWorks sequel Madagascar Escape 2 Africa there is High School Musical 3, but that belongs to the Disney empire.
Shia LaBeouf might be on his way to scoring another career $100M+ blockbuster as his latest actioner Eagle Eye enjoyed a good hold in its second frame. Last weekend's top film dropped 39% to an estimated $17.7M and lifted the film's ten-day cume to a solid $54.6M. Paramount and its soon-to-be-ex-wife DreamWorks should find their way to $95-100M.
Despite Eagle Eye's presence, Sony was still able to connect with teens and young adults with its comedy Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist which debuted in third place with an estimated $12M. Playing in 2,421 playdates, the PG-13 romantic comedy averaged a healthy $4,957. According to studio research, 55% of the audience was under 21 while 62% was female. With Chihuahua skewing very young and most other new releases aiming for adults over 30, Playlist was able to reach a crowd that had few viable options this weekend. The modest $13M budget should allow it to become a moneymaker too.
Richard Gere and Diane Lane suffered the worst drop in the top ten with their romance Nights in Rodanthe which fell 45% to an estimated $7.4M. With $25.1M in the bank, the Warner Bros. release should reach about $40M. By comparison, the actors charmed $52.8M from movie fans in 2002 with Unfaithful which amounts to about $65M at today's ticket prices.
The Ed Harris-directed Western Appaloosa expanded nationally after a two-week limited run and enjoyed a respectable take of an estimated $5M from 1,045 theaters. Averaging $4,794 per location, the Warner Bros. title showed that there is still an audience for this classic genre of films. Cume is $5.6M. Samuel L. Jackson's thriller Lakeview Terrace slipped only 35% to an estimated $4.5M in its third frame boosting the 17-day total to $32.1M for Sony.
Focus followed with Burn After Reading which grossed an estimated $4.08M, off just 34%, for a $51.6M cume. The Christian-themed hit Fireproof was close behind with an estimated $4.07M dropping a reasonable 41% in the second weekend. Budgeted at a mere $500,000, the Samuel Goldwyn release has captured a solid $12.5M in ten days and could go on to finish with an impressive $20-25M.
Vivendi Entertainment opened its first wide release with the David Zucker-directed comedy An American Carol which grossed an estimated $3.8M for a ninth place finish. Playing in 1,639 locations in the United States, the PG-13 film about a Michael Moore-type filmmaker who is visited by three ghosts who show him the true meaning of America averaged only $2,325 per site. Kevin Farley, Kelsey Grammer, and Leslie Nielsen star and reviews were not very positive. Carol opens in Canada this Friday.
Rounding out the top ten and scoring the second best average on that list was the Bill Maher doc Religulous which collected an estimated $3.5M from only 502 theaters for a potent $6,972 average. Directed by Larry Charles (Borat), the R-rated film that explores the merits of organized religion earned generally upbeat reviews for Lionsgate. The last film to open in the top ten in fewer theaters was the Spanish-language immigration drama Under the Same Moon with $2.8M from 266 sites in March.
A slew of new releases also debuted outside the top ten with most generating disappointing results. The one film which audiences did actually connect with was the Anne Hathaway drama Rachel Getting Married which scored a sensational $33,667 average from nine theaters after grossing an estimated $303,000 this weekend in its platform bow. The Sony Classics release about a surly young woman who goes back home for her sister's wedding has been praised by critics and has earned Hathaway plenty of kudos buzz making her, at the moment, one of the frontrunners on Oscar night. Directed by Jonathan Demme, the R-rated pic expands into more markets in the coming weeks.
Universal stumbled with its Greg Kinnear drama Flash of Genius which opened in 1,098 locations collecting just $2.3M, according to estimates. With a weak $2,120 average, the tale of an inventor screwed by the auto giants just didn't make moviegoers want to spend top dollar. Reviews were mixed.
Miramax's new arthouse thriller Blindness was panned by critics and flopped in its nationwide opening. The Julianne Moore pic took in an estimated $2M from 1,690 sites for an embarrassing $1,185 average. The figures only represent the U.S. and not Canada. The Simon Pegg comedy How to Lose Friends and Alienate People attracted few people debuting to an estimated $1.4M. Averaging only $801 from 1,750 theaters, the MGM release saw weak reviews from critics.
The top ten films grossed an estimated $91M which was up a robust 44% from last year when The Game Plan remained in the top spot in its second frame with $16.6M; but off 7% from 2006 when The Departed debuted at number one with $26.9M.
Moviegoers just couldn't resist talking animals and the Disney brand name as Beverly Hills Chihuahua delivered a powerful number one opening with an estimated $29M over the Friday-to-Sunday period. Averaging a stellar $9,020 from 3,215 locations, the PG-rated tale of a rich dog lost in Mexico connected with kids and parents and posted the best opening for a kidpic since June's WALL•E launched to $63.1M. It was the second best family film opening ever in the September-October corridor trailing only Will Smith's Shark Tale which debuted to $47.6M in October 2004. Also helping the Mouse House this weekend was the lack of good family movies over the past couple of months. The road ahead looks rosy as few options for children stand in the way of Chihuahua over the next month. Between now and the November 7 launch of the DreamWorks sequel Madagascar Escape 2 Africa there is High School Musical 3, but that belongs to the Disney empire.
Shia LaBeouf might be on his way to scoring another career $100M+ blockbuster as his latest actioner Eagle Eye enjoyed a good hold in its second frame. Last weekend's top film dropped 39% to an estimated $17.7M and lifted the film's ten-day cume to a solid $54.6M. Paramount and its soon-to-be-ex-wife DreamWorks should find their way to $95-100M.
Despite Eagle Eye's presence, Sony was still able to connect with teens and young adults with its comedy Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist which debuted in third place with an estimated $12M. Playing in 2,421 playdates, the PG-13 romantic comedy averaged a healthy $4,957. According to studio research, 55% of the audience was under 21 while 62% was female. With Chihuahua skewing very young and most other new releases aiming for adults over 30, Playlist was able to reach a crowd that had few viable options this weekend. The modest $13M budget should allow it to become a moneymaker too.
Richard Gere and Diane Lane suffered the worst drop in the top ten with their romance Nights in Rodanthe which fell 45% to an estimated $7.4M. With $25.1M in the bank, the Warner Bros. release should reach about $40M. By comparison, the actors charmed $52.8M from movie fans in 2002 with Unfaithful which amounts to about $65M at today's ticket prices.
The Ed Harris-directed Western Appaloosa expanded nationally after a two-week limited run and enjoyed a respectable take of an estimated $5M from 1,045 theaters. Averaging $4,794 per location, the Warner Bros. title showed that there is still an audience for this classic genre of films. Cume is $5.6M. Samuel L. Jackson's thriller Lakeview Terrace slipped only 35% to an estimated $4.5M in its third frame boosting the 17-day total to $32.1M for Sony.
Focus followed with Burn After Reading which grossed an estimated $4.08M, off just 34%, for a $51.6M cume. The Christian-themed hit Fireproof was close behind with an estimated $4.07M dropping a reasonable 41% in the second weekend. Budgeted at a mere $500,000, the Samuel Goldwyn release has captured a solid $12.5M in ten days and could go on to finish with an impressive $20-25M.
Vivendi Entertainment opened its first wide release with the David Zucker-directed comedy An American Carol which grossed an estimated $3.8M for a ninth place finish. Playing in 1,639 locations in the United States, the PG-13 film about a Michael Moore-type filmmaker who is visited by three ghosts who show him the true meaning of America averaged only $2,325 per site. Kevin Farley, Kelsey Grammer, and Leslie Nielsen star and reviews were not very positive. Carol opens in Canada this Friday.
Rounding out the top ten and scoring the second best average on that list was the Bill Maher doc Religulous which collected an estimated $3.5M from only 502 theaters for a potent $6,972 average. Directed by Larry Charles (Borat), the R-rated film that explores the merits of organized religion earned generally upbeat reviews for Lionsgate. The last film to open in the top ten in fewer theaters was the Spanish-language immigration drama Under the Same Moon with $2.8M from 266 sites in March.
A slew of new releases also debuted outside the top ten with most generating disappointing results. The one film which audiences did actually connect with was the Anne Hathaway drama Rachel Getting Married which scored a sensational $33,667 average from nine theaters after grossing an estimated $303,000 this weekend in its platform bow. The Sony Classics release about a surly young woman who goes back home for her sister's wedding has been praised by critics and has earned Hathaway plenty of kudos buzz making her, at the moment, one of the frontrunners on Oscar night. Directed by Jonathan Demme, the R-rated pic expands into more markets in the coming weeks.
Universal stumbled with its Greg Kinnear drama Flash of Genius which opened in 1,098 locations collecting just $2.3M, according to estimates. With a weak $2,120 average, the tale of an inventor screwed by the auto giants just didn't make moviegoers want to spend top dollar. Reviews were mixed.
Miramax's new arthouse thriller Blindness was panned by critics and flopped in its nationwide opening. The Julianne Moore pic took in an estimated $2M from 1,690 sites for an embarrassing $1,185 average. The figures only represent the U.S. and not Canada. The Simon Pegg comedy How to Lose Friends and Alienate People attracted few people debuting to an estimated $1.4M. Averaging only $801 from 1,750 theaters, the MGM release saw weak reviews from critics.
The top ten films grossed an estimated $91M which was up a robust 44% from last year when The Game Plan remained in the top spot in its second frame with $16.6M; but off 7% from 2006 when The Departed debuted at number one with $26.9M.
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tomwaitsjr writes: on Oct 05 2008 04:52 PM I'm glad religulous did well, but ecstatic about Rachel getting Married. I was surprised SNL had Hathaway host when so few peeps could see her movie. She was a fantastic host (I'll never hear supercalifragilisous the same way again). I'm also glad, because Demme is one of my all time favorite directors (I worship "Something Wild," but few can pan his "Silence of the Lambs.") =) And chihuahua doing well just proves that more and more people are using Pot as an alternative to Alcohol. (And why doesn't the Review Revue allow comments STILL?) (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Oct 05 2008 04:57 PM Religulous was really good, Bill Maher is awesome! I'll see Appaloosa this week I think. I'm looking forward to Rachel Getting Married. 29 mil for Bev Hills really?!?! (Reply to this) |
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vashfanatic writes: on Oct 05 2008 05:12 PM Wow, a documentary (if you can use the word for what's basically Maher doing a long strings of jokes about religion) made it into the top ten. Impressive. Controversy, I suppose, is the best thing for the box office. The front page lists "An American Soldier" instead of "An American Carol." Somebody should fix that. (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Oct 05 2008 05:46 PM Boy How To Lose Friends and Alienate People tanked I guess. Definite rental along with Flash of Genius and Nick and Norah. (Reply to this) |
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ledawg1138 writes: on Oct 05 2008 06:25 PM I don't like Bill Maher. He's not funny. Oh well, I have no interest in BHC but it should satisfy the intended audience. AAC don't look funny and N&NIP looks so lame. Oh well, again! Nights in Rodanthe looks so lame that BHC love story is provacitive. Zzzzzzzz... (Reply to this) |
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rockclmbr6 writes: on Oct 05 2008 06:50 PM So not only am I apparently the only person that liked Blindness, I'm also the only person that saw it...oh well. I'll be seeing Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist this weekend. Even my manly self can enjoy a romantic movie every once in a while (Once, Before Sunrise/Sunset, Eternal Sunshine) and I really think it looks like a charming movie. The reviews sound great too so I'm excited. (Reply to this) |
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susan08 writes: on Oct 05 2008 06:54 PM WOW...Just heard my bros told me some hot models are putting up their profile on a tall dating site ___ www.Tallchat.com ___,are they just on fire or what?? (Reply to this) |
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CoUcH ToMaToE DoUgIe writes: on Oct 05 2008 06:56 PM In reply to this comment (#2064428) Yes, Vashfanatic, I notice that too? I hope Rotten Tomatoes isn't trying to do deceive the public by not granting American Carol its due. Whether you liked it or not, it certified its place in the box office top ten and it deserves to be listed at # 9 overalll right ahead of the equally controversial Maher film. Please, fix this RT or you are gonna get the crazy nutjobs thinking you won't support this film's right wing "comedy" ;) Second- $29 million?!? Really, my fellow American moviegoers, this is what places atop our box office?!?!??! I'm starting to wonder why people even try making good cinmea anymore. If this steaming pile of dog crap can earn nearly 30 million dollars then what's the point? {Sigh} (Reply to this) |
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JettaJameson writes: on Oct 05 2008 07:17 PM I love Anne Hathaway. Ever since The Princess Diaries. She picks such good projects. I love ALL of her movies. I'm very excited to see Rachel Getting Married. I'm glad to see it did so well. (Reply to this) |
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tfortier writes: on Oct 05 2008 07:36 PM wow! Appaloosa $5M and Chihuahua $29M... People are soooo stupid. (Reply to this) |
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lily_starr writes: on Oct 05 2008 07:58 PM People are stupid, BUT a large part of why BHC made so much more than some of the better alternatives is that in many towns, including mine, the choices are very limited. There is no Apaloosa here, nor Rachel Getting Married, nor Burn After Reading, nor Blindness, etc. etc. Many people do not have a choice, here it was BHC, N&NIP, Eagle Eye, or Lakeview Terrace...blech. The other reason it is doing so well is that for families it is the only movie for kids currently out. (Reply to this) |
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screwhead100 writes: on Oct 05 2008 08:00 PM i never liked Bill Maher either, until i saw this movie.......it was fantasic (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Oct 05 2008 08:18 PM In reply to this comment (#2064645) BILL MAHER=AWESOMENESS! (Reply to this) |
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Kokushi writes: on Oct 05 2008 08:25 PM I remember as a kid of the 80s movies like back to the future, batman, the goonies,Karate Kid,Ghostbusters where my parents took my family to have a good time in the movie theater but what a shame and i know the 2000s is not the same as the 80s but why dont rent a pixar movie or any other of the thousands of movies out there, get some pizza and saved for a week when is worth taking your family. (Reply to this) |
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CoUcH ToMaToE DoUgIe writes: on Oct 05 2008 09:43 PM ... and once again apologies to my friend and peer, Jokerboy, but I can't respect Maher's film. Any film that profits from Maher's camouflage comedy- hate speech- is wrong and prejudice. I know there are people will scream free speech but I have feeling Maher is just having fun by disrespecting and abusing folks who have faith. Its sad when I think about... if Maher wasn't such an ***%hole then I think his opinions would be taken a lot more seriously. In the end, no one can ever answer me this question- Why Should I respect this man's opinion and comedy when he thinks my faith makes me an absolute joke and idiot? (Reply to this) |
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alsanali writes: on Oct 05 2008 09:46 PM In reply to this comment (#2064671) Yeah, ALL movies from the 80's were like Ghostbusters and the Karate Kid, right? Every weekend for a whole decade a classic came out. Not a single bad movie came out of the 80's. (Reply to this) |
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thereign writes: on Oct 05 2008 10:03 PM While I'd have to agree that the 80's were the last great decade for films, I'd have to say there were more than a few bad movies that came out. Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo, anyone? Also, VERY disappointed to see Appaloosa beaten by something like BHC. Appaloosa was a damn good film. (Reply to this) |
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bondfreak writes: on Oct 05 2008 10:45 PM Good work all around in the box-office its nice to see October of all months start like this (Reply to this) |
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medikboi_84 writes: on Oct 05 2008 11:22 PM Interesting weekend and interesting comments. I have to agree with couch tomatoe, Bill Maher uses very angery hateful humor to make fun of others, instead of presenting his ideas in a logical tasteful comedy. As for the comment about the 80's being the last great film decade I must have missed something. 90's had plenty of great classics and 2000's haven't done badly either. The only problem is the over crowded market and remake and sequal fringe the movie industry seems to be stuck in. However great films do come out at about the same pace they did in the 80's. (Reply to this) |
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fvzappa writes: on Oct 05 2008 11:46 PM In reply to this comment (#2064830) Oh yea EVERY 80's movie was simply WONDERFUL... oh, how we wish it was so. I have several huge newspaper cutouts from "The Breakfast Club" that say 'starts today' and (since newspaper is double-sided) I have many other advertisements for some truly wonderful films like "The Falcon & the Snowman", "Turk 182". Remember those classics?? (Reply to this) |
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