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News / Columns / Box Office
Box Office Guru Wrapup: Audiences Still Choose The Hangover
Up and The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 round out the top spots,
by Gitesh Pandya | June 14, 2009
Discuss Article

This weekend moviegoers could not get enough of Mike Tyson's tiger as the raunchy Vegas-set comedy The Hangover spent a second weekend at number one, dropping a remarkably low amount, and is on course to become the top-grossing R-rated comedy of all time. Also holding up well was the toon titan Up which remained in second place with a small decline of its own as it attempts to become Pixar's biggest blockbuster ever. Among new releases, Denzel Washington's hostage thriller The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 landed in third place with a respectable bow while Eddie Murphy's family comedy Imagine That was dead on arrival with one of the worst openings of the year.

Sliding only 26% from its surprisingly powerful debut, The Hangover was once again the top choice for ticket buyers selling an estimated $33.4M worth of stubs this weekend to lead all films in the marketplace. The Warner Bros. hit has now grossed a stunning $105.4M in just 10 days. Normally only big-budget action movies join the century club this fast, not no-star comedies costing under $30M. Moviegoers that took a wait-and-see approach last weekend were infected by the buzz and the post-bachelor party flick is now broadening its audience and benefiting from strong recommendations.

The second weekend drop was even lower than those enjoyed by other popular R-rated summer comedies like >Knocked Up (36%), Tropic Thunder (37%), and Superbad (45%). Instead, Hangover's decline was much like the 24% that both leggy 2005 hits Wedding Crashers and The 40-Year-Old Virgin enjoyed. Hangover had little competition from new releases this weekend for its core audience of young adults as one film was an action offering playing older and the other was a comedy that was completely ignored. The sleeper hit now looks to surge past the $200M mark and could even surpass Wedding Crashers to become the highest-grossing R-rated comedy ever.

Holding steady in the runnerup spot with a small decline of its own was the animated blockbuster Up which took in an estimated $30.5M in its third frame. Down only 31%, the Disney/Pixar sensation boosted its 17-day cume to a robust $187.2M. Up has now joined Shrek 2 as the only animated films in box office history to gross more than $30M in each of their first three frames. Third weekend grosses for other big toon hits include $28.4M for Finding Nemo, $28.2M for Shrek, $28M for Shrek the Third, and $26.5M for The Incredibles.

Compared to Nemo, Pixar's top performer ever, Up scored a larger third weekend gross and a smaller decline beating the fish pic's 39% drop. Nemo took in $191.5M in its first 17 days during the same time of year on its way to $339.7M and Up now looks to be on a trajectory to break the $300M mark as well thanks to great word-of-mouth and strong repeat business.

Denzel Washington faced off with John Travolta in the action remake The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 which debuted in third place with an estimated $25M. The Tony Scott-directed pic averaged a solid $8,133 from 3,074 locations and ended up in the same range as many of Washington's previous R-rated action films. In fact, the casting of Travolta seemed to add little value at the box office. Openings for Washington include $29M for Inside Man, $22.8M for Man on Fire, and $22.6M for Training Day. Pelham gave the Oscar winner his third best career opening after American Gangster ($43.6M) and Inside.

Fox's franchise flick Night at the Museum dipped only 34% in its fourth adventure to an estimated $9.6M. Total to date stands at $143.4M. Following its poor showing on opening weekend, Will Ferrell's competing action-comedy Land of the Lost fell 51% to an estimated $9.2M finishing in fifth. The $100M+ production has taken in just $35M in ten days for Universal and should stumble to a lackluster $55-60M final tally.

Eddie Murphy enjoyed a big win this weekend as he beat out the opening of his last dud Meet Dave. But just by an inch. The comedian's latest attempt at PG-rated family comedy Imagine That was rejected by parents and kids opening in seventh place to a dismal $5.7M, according to estimates. Paramount released the $55M production in 3,008 theaters and was rewarded with a laughable $1,895 average. It was the third worst opening weekend average for a wide opener all year faring better than only Battle for Terra ($933 from 1,160 theaters) and Miss March ($1,383 from 1,742). In fact, the last movie to open in 3,000+ theaters and generate a lower average than Imagine That was actually Meet Dave last July with its dreadful $5.3M from 3,011 sites and $1,744 average. Big paychecks for family comedies may have dried up for Eddie.

Star Trek didn't have the lowest decline in the top ten this time, but the sci-fi reboot still held up very well in its sixth round grossing an estimated $5.6M. Off only 33%, the Paramount smash lifted its total to $232M. Rival actioner Terminator Salvation followed with an estimated $4.7M, down 43%, for a $113.8M total for Warner Bros.

Sony's Angels & Demons ranked eighth falling 36% to an estimated $4.2M boosting the domestic total to $123.3M. Rounding out the top ten was the horror flick Drag Me to Hell which scared up an estimated $3.9M, down 45%, giving Universal $35.1M to date.

Audiences have been cutting their spending on sequels this summer. Battle of the Smithsonian is running 23% behind the pace of the first Night at the Museum at the same point in its run, Terminator Salvation is 17% behind T3, and Angels & Demons is 38% behind The Da Vinci Code. Add in higher ticket prices and the gaps widen when comparing admissions.

Francis Ford Coppola's new self-distributed pic Tetro debuted impressively in platform release grossing an estimated $31,339 from solo houses in New York and Los Angeles for a solid $15,670 average. Since its Thursday launch, the Buenos Aires-set drama has collected $38,169. Expanding successfully in limited play was the Focus comedy Away We Go which widened from four to 45 locations taking in an estimated $554,000 for an encouraging $12,311 average. Many indie films collapse after expanding from New York and Los Angeles but this quirky pregnancy pic showed strength in over a dozen markets making it a true independent hit attracting the non-popcorn crowd.

The top ten films grossed an estimated $131.7M which was down 25% from last year when The Incredible Hulk opened in the top spot with $55.4M; and off 4% from 2007 when Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer debuted at number one with $58.1M.

Author: Gitesh Pandya

www.BoxOfficeGuru.com

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Comments (1-20 of 101 posts) | Reply
jaysix
jaysix writes:
on Jun 14 2009 06:13 PM

Worst summer movie season ever ? Probably.

(Reply to this)
oddjob323
oddjob323 writes:
on Jun 14 2009 06:39 PM

Yeah, really only Star Trek and Up lived up to expectations. Luckily, we got a couple of surprise comedies that did pretty well in I Love You, Man and The Hangover. There is still some time left for good movies.

(Reply to this)
bondfreak
bondfreak writes:
on Jun 14 2009 06:42 PM

I like the fact that audiences are choosing quality instead of moneymakers, all the movies that should be making money are (Hangover, Up, Star Trek) and all the others are behind their prequels or just not good (Night at the museum, angels and demons, imagine that, wolverine etc.) Summer hits over drive in July anyways in terms of money. Public Enemies, Ice Age 3, Harry Potter, Bruno and Funny People) and dont forget Transformers 2 and Inglourious Bastards. Up, Hangover and Star Trek deserve all the money their getting. It just goes to show you that the biggest opening weekends doesnt necessarily mean a good movie. Wolverines opening weekend is almost half of its whole total (it was okay). Watchmens opening weekend was 55% of its entire total (i liked it however). Star Treks opening weekend is only a third of its total. Yay moviegoers for picking the good ones!

(Reply to this)
De4ective Detectiv3
De4ective Detectiv3 writes:
on Jun 14 2009 06:50 PM

I don't really think that this movie season has been all that bad, I'm just disappointed that the big 4th of July release is going to be Transformers 2. Geuss I can always go see Public Enemies(buzz isn't too good on this one) or Moon.

I like the fact that the new Star Trek reboot was a success, for that alone the summer was a success. And I also thought the new Terminator was a little underrated, but I blame Christian Bale for screwing that movie up by forcing re-writes.


(Reply to this)
v-alexander-the-great
v-alexander-the-great writes:
on Jun 14 2009 06:56 PM

I wasn't a big fan of Hangover or Up, but they were decent, I guess they deserve the top spots.

Back to Shrek, Eddie Murphy! I wonder what he'll do if they stop the franchise.


(Reply to this)
Bob S.
Bob S. writes:
on Jun 14 2009 07:02 PM

In reply to this comment (#2513077)
@CtrlAltDestroy:
While Bale was part of the problem, I think the biggest flaws are the director and the writers. If you look at the early drafts that Bale wanted re-written, there are some really, really abominable, horrible ideas that I'm glad never made it to screen. For example, how would you feel if the movie had the Terminators actually trying to SAVE humanity? Or with a machine killing John Connor and all the leaders of the resistance, essentially making them the winners of the war?

I'm surprised by how little THE HANGOVER dropped. I think it's going to end up being the highest-grossing comedy ever (non-adjusted for inflation). In a summer that's sparse on great entertainment, I'm glad that the right movies have legs and good multipliers, while the clunkers are falling fast. Hopefully will lead to more quality entertainment instead of the slightly warmed rehash crap that populates most of Hollywood today.


(Reply to this)
TombstoneLawDog
TombstoneLawDog writes:
on Jun 14 2009 07:13 PM

So far it's been a pretty weak season. Nothing has really blown me away and I confess I'm one of the few who didn't really get into 'Hangover.'

...then again, wasn't this supposed to be the summer that got crapped on by the writer's strike? Kind of makes sense.

Then again, I aim pretty much all my hatred at the people involved in 'Wolverine' which was the ****tiest blockbuster I've seen in years. Makes 'X3' look like 'Full Metal Jacket.'

C'mon, Transformers2, don't let me down...


(Reply to this)
Chris B.
Chris B. writes:
on Jun 14 2009 07:33 PM

yeah don't worry i'm sure the box office will be blown to bits and then defecated on then blown up again by the awesomeness that is Transformers 2.

(Reply to this)
Mr. Bo Ziffer
Mr. Bo Ziffer writes:
on Jun 14 2009 07:34 PM

In reply to this comment (#2513077)
The first movie also got released on the Fourth of July back in '07. Does Michael Bay think that his movies are more important than celebrating America's birthday with beer and Mexican fireworks? Commie.

I too am looking forward to Public Enemies, but the local theater isn't showing Moon, so I'll have to wait for DVD. Inglourious Basterds is gonna be beat-@$$ as well.


(Reply to this)
MovieMaster
MovieMaster writes:
on Jun 14 2009 07:36 PM

I think this summer movie season hasn't been all that bad. We've had some great movies in Up, Drag Me To Hell, The Hangover, and Stark Trek. The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 wasn't too bad. We've had a few that weren't really good or bad like Night at the Museum 2. and then we've just had some really bad movies with Terminator Salvation, Land of the Lost, and Wolverine. Overall I'd say so far the summer movie season hasn't been too bad.

I'm really looking forward to the rest. Transformers 2, Public Enemies, Harry Potter, Funny People, Inglorious Bastards, Bruno and possibly Year One all look to be good.


(Reply to this)
Seth T.
Seth T. writes:
on Jun 14 2009 07:56 PM

cant wait for public enemies and harry potter!!! and transformers 2 looks to be good. why are people bashing wolverine? i actually thought it was better than the first three.

(Reply to this)
future film director
future film director writes:
on Jun 14 2009 08:23 PM

The Hangover might encourage more R-rated flicks in the future which is a great thing, hopefully Public Enemies will be good, and in closing I hope no one goes and see's Year One, it looks funny but I am very disappointed in Judd Apatow for taking the films' R rating and re-editing for a wimpy PG-13 comedy. Im going to rent it, but no way am I going to see it in theatres, I suggest everyone do the same and encourage more R-rated movies.

(Reply to this)
jokerboy1991
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Jun 14 2009 08:34 PM

Wha?!?!?!? I think this summer has been amazing so far! UP was fantastic! Drag Me to Hell, The Brothers Bloom, and MOON were really ****ing good. Star Trek turned out pretty awesome and so did The Hangover. I also liked Terminator as an action movie, it wasn't a disappointment to me because I expected Alien Resurrection. We still have Public Enemies to be the great movie of the summer and probably/hopefully Inglorious Basterds. Harry Potter will probably be really good. Transformers 2 is going to be fun. Also we have FUNNY PEOPLE coming! I think this summer has already topped last summer in my book.

(Reply to this)
jokerboy1991
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Jun 14 2009 08:37 PM

Oh yeah and Bruno! Also when you say *buzz* for Public Enemies do you mean the hype or the word coming from the test screenings? Most of the reviews from those screenings have been really positive.

(Reply to this)
Bob S.
Bob S. writes:
on Jun 14 2009 08:56 PM

@TombstoneLawDog:
Yeah, I agree, except that I liked STAR TREK quite a bit. There were a few films this summer that were affected by the writers' strike, but I think the aftermath of that is more or less over. TRANSFORMERS 2 was affected by it to some degree, but then again, Bay was the only person that had seen the full script of the original movie, so it'll likely be a lot of Bayhem again. Megan Fox didn't even realize that she was the female lead in the movie because she had no context for how big or small her part was. I expect a lot of bombastic action scenes and far more attention given to the effects than the story itself.

@future film director:
There are a lot of raunchy comedies that bandy an R-rating. Comedies, as a genre, have embraced the rating wholeheartedly and require little encouragement in that regard. I'm talking about movies like I LOVE YOU, MAN, ROLE MODELS, SEX DRIVE, WEDDING CRASHERS, KNOCKED UP, SUPERBAD, ZACK AND MIRI MAKE A PORNO, THE 40 YEAR OLD VIRGIN - the list goes on and on. Are you aslo going to avoid BRUNO because that was re-cut to alter the rating from NC-17 to R? All that said, I don't think that the rating has much to do at all with the quality of a movie. Good filmmaking is about a lot more than dropping f bombs and excessive violence or nudity that requires an R rating versus a PG-13.


(Reply to this)
DKUK
DKUK writes:
on Jun 14 2009 09:11 PM

Ahhh, all I can do at the moment is listen to all the comments and the hype about The Hangover, as I probably won't be able to catch it in this part of the world (China), dare I say, it'll probably be on DVD in a couple of months here, we only get the big blockbusters here like Star Trek (good), Wolverine (****), Terminator (not as **** as Wolve), Night At the Museum (don't want to waste my hard earned RMB)...judging from the success of The Hangover, it proves that there is a market for R-rate movies - if only Wolverine was R rated and actually had a good storyline, that movie for me has been the biggest disappointment so far this summer.

(Reply to this)
TheCaptain of TeamLoyalty
TheCaptain of TeamLoyalty writes:
on Jun 14 2009 09:25 PM

Bruno looks like ****. But what would you expect form a one trick pony who thinks that he is somehow different than Tom Green. God Tom Green sucks but he has more talent in his one nut than Cohen has in his entire body. Good to see UP and Hangover doing well.

(Reply to this)
mcwf1
mcwf1 writes:
on Jun 14 2009 09:26 PM

I admit, while this season hasn't been the BEST, I have been very pleased thus far.

Star Trek was a fun, interesting flick with great casting and solid directing.

The Hangover had me in tears several times - seeing it in a packed theater probably made it seem funnier than it truly was (people start laughing, you tend to join in, etc etc) but the baby doing something naughty was probably the funniest moment of the year for me.

And as far as UP is concerned... If the first 10 minutes didn't nearly bring you to tears, you should die of no-heart disease. I thought it was one of the most genuinely beautiful movies of all time.

Can't wait for: Transformers 2, Harry Potter, Funny People, Public Enemies and Inglorious Basteards.


(Reply to this)
Chris B.
Chris B. writes:
on Jun 14 2009 09:35 PM

IGN.com just posted their review of Transformers 2 and they say it has TOO MUCH action and that the action in the first movie is nothing compared to this movie. i don't know whether that's a bad thing or not but i can't wait!!!

(Reply to this)
kaitune
kaitune writes:
on Jun 14 2009 09:44 PM

For the summer discussion, I think this is a pretty good summer. I enjoyed The Hangover much more than I thought I would (and I did have quite an expectation). Star Trek was amazing. Up was great (although Wall-E still topped as my most favorite Pixar film). I went into Angel & Demon expecting only a popcorn flick and that went pretty well. There are also many films that I really look forward to. Funny People seems good. I usually dig Quentin Tarantino's film, so I probably would love Inglorious Basterds too. I would cut my legs to see Public Enemies, and Harry Potter's trailer brings back the Potter mania in me. Transformer2 also seems like a sure tasty popcorn flick. Not to mention some other minor films I am interested in seeing as well.

However, I am bloody disappointed with Terminator even though I tried to lower my expectation (quite a lot) due to the review prior viewing. I think it is because the trailer has been leading me to expect so much more. Wolverine was also especially ****ty even though I kinda knew what I would be getting (although I might revisit a pirate downloaded copy when my friend and I are drunk. Seem like the kind of films to make fun of.)

I don't really remember how last summer go for me (since I was so busy during that time), but this summer is clearly faring quite well despite some (pretty big) disappointment.


(Reply to this)
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