Box Office Guru Wrapup: Carell & Sandler Sequels Rule Box Office

Humor was in demand as A-list funnymen Steve Carell and Adam Sandler dominated the box office with their hit sequels Despicable Me 2 and Grown Ups 2, respectively, while the raunchy laughs of The Heat with Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy also finished among the top four movies for the frame. The big-budget sci-fi actioner Pacific Rim opened in third and helped lead another weekend when ticket sales were substantially ahead of last year's.

Staying at number one for a second weekend, Despicable Me 2 delivered a solid sophomore frame with an estimated $44.8M dropping only 46%. The toon smash has now amassed a staggering $229.2M and could be on its way to doing $350M or more from North America alone. By next weekend, it will surpass the $251.5M domestic total of its 2010 predecessor.

The Minions continued to win over audiences around the world too. The international marketplace took in a hefty $55.5M from 50 markets boosting the offshore sum to $243.2M and the global tally to $472.4M and rising quickly. By midweek, the worldwide haul will crush the half-billion mark.

Adam Sandler scored another box office hit, this time with his first-ever sequel, as the comedy Grown Ups 2 debuted close behind in second place with an estimated $42.5M. The Sony release averaged a sturdy $12,174 from 3,491 locations with no help from 3D. That edged out the $40.5M debut of its 2010 predecessor which went on to finish with $162M domestically. Grown Ups 2 tied last fall's animated hit Hotel Transylvania for Sander's second biggest opening weekend ever trailing only the $47.6M of 2005's The Longest Yard.

The funnyman's live-action films since the first Grown Ups ranged from disappointing to pathetic at the box office indicating that fans may have tired of his brand of humor. But the sequel opened at the high end of Sandler's usual first weekend range cementing his status as one of the most reliable box office draws in the business. He is well on his way to having his 14th $100M+ domestic grosser over the past 15 years.

Grown Ups 2 - which also brought back Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade, and Salma Hayek - skewed 53% female giving that audience a funny and light alternative to the macho action fare. 54% was under 25. Reviews were among the worst of the year which is usually the case with Sandler's films. They don't win over critics, but they do sell to mainstream moviegoers looking for light-hearted fun that requires no thinking. The CinemaScore grade was a mediocre B.

Opening in third place was the sci-fi actioner Pacific Rim with an estimated $38.3M from 3,275 theaters for a good $11,695 average. That was about even with the $37.1M bow of April's futuristic thriller Oblivion with Tom Cruise. Both were sci-fi action pics not based on known brands which also had 3D and IMAX contributing. Oblivion was star-driven but Pacific had a prime summer slot. District 9 from the summer of 2009 opened to a similar $37.4M.

Ordinarily this would be a very strong opening for an original action film with no major box office stars. However, Pacific Rim carried an enormous budget, reportedly in the $200M range, so it will take a long road to reach break-even. Directed by Guillermo del Toro, Rim tells the story of a time in the near future when humans build humungous robots to do battle with alien monsters on a mission to exterminate Earth's inhabitants.

Reviews were very positive and the CinemaScore grade was an encouraging A- which was the same as for other summer action flicks like Man of Steel, White House Down, and The Heat. This might indicate a good road ahead, although fanboy pics typically draw their main audience upfront. Studio research showed that males made up 61% of the crowd while 53% were over 25. The special effects were a big draw as 19% of the gross came from IMAX screens and 50% overall came from the 3D format. That share represented the highest of any film in that format this summer.

About half of the international marketplace opened Pacific Rim this weekend with $53M collected from 38 markets for a global debut of $91.3M. Most, but not all, markets were impressive led by $9.6M in Korea and $9.3M in Russia. More key markets are to come including France and Germany next weekend and China, which could be a huge one for an IMAX film like this, on July 31.

Enjoying the best hold in the top ten was the Sandra Bullock-Melissa McCarthy comedy hit The Heat which grossed an estimated $14M in its third weekend, off 44%. The Fox release surged to $112.4M becoming the sixth live-action $100M+ domestic grosser for Bullock and third for McCarthy in a major role.

Disney contributed the next two films. The mega-budgeted adventure The Lone Ranger tanked in its second frame with an estimated $11.1M falling a steep 62%. That was especially troubling considering that the opening day did not fall on the first frame's Friday-to-Sunday take. The Johnny Depp misfire should end its domestic run just under the $100M mark. Overseas grosses are not exactly on fire. Only $48M has been collected so far from 33 markets representing a third of the overall foreign marketplace with the worldwide figure at just $119.1M. Additional major territories don't open until August.

Among suppliers, the studio is seeing much better results from Pixar than from Jerry Bruckheimer. The toon sequel Monsters University declined by 46% to an estimated $10.6M in its fourth round pushing the total to $237.8M. The global score has risen to $474.2M on its way to over $600M.

Hunk-led disaster movies followed. Brad Pitt's zombie thriller World War Z fell 49% to an estimated $9.4M while Channing Tatum's White House Down dropped 54% to an estimated $6.2M. Totals are $177.1M for Paramount and $63M for Sony.

Standup concert film Kevin Hart: Let Me Explain followed with an estimated $5M, off 50%, giving Lionsgate $26.4M to date. Rounding out the top ten was the superhero smash Man of Steel which tumbled 58% to an estimated $4.8M putting Warner Bros. at $281M thus far. A final in the $290-295M range should result.

In the limited release scene, The Weinstein Co. attracted sensational business to its Sundance winner Fruitvale Station which bowed in just seven sites to an estimated $377,000 for a scorching $53,857 average. Reviews have been terrific and Oscar buzz is already growing. The Hindi film Bhaag Milkha Bhaag debuted to an estimated $670,000 from 139 theaters for a $4,820 average for distributor Reliance Entertainment. Indie comedy hit The Way, Way Back expanded from 19 to 79 locations and grossed an estimated $1.1M for a solid $14,051 average. With $1.9M to date, Fox Searchlight will expand to nearly 300 theaters on Friday.

The top ten films grossed an estimated $186.7M which was up 25% from last year when Ice Age: Continental Drift opened at number one with $46.6M; but down 25% from 2011 when Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 debuted in the top spot with a record $169.2M.

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Comments

I fight for the users

Ian Fastert

Damn those idiots who saw Grown Ups! Damn you!

Jul 14 - 06:10 PM

Rebeccachu Elizabeth C.

Rebecca Clark

I cannot believe it! A disastrous sequel to a terrible 2010 film beat giant robots at the box office?!

Tis is a sad day for us moviegoers. No wonder Hollywood sucks now.

Jul 14 - 11:08 PM

Gordon Franklin Terry Sr

Gordon Terry

PACIFIC RIM IS FREAKING AWESOME!!!!!!

Jul 15 - 12:11 PM

Dave J

Dave J

I'll try to check it out sometime next week!

Jul 15 - 12:41 PM

Dave J

Dave J

A third movie of "Grown Ups" is going to give Sandlers each of his fellow cast mates each of them another car since that's what he does if a film were to do well!

Jul 16 - 11:51 AM

Typhon

Typhon Q

I really don't see how Grown Ups 2 beat Pacific Rim at the box office.

As for The Lone Ranger, I doubt that anyone expected it to do well.

Jul 14 - 06:11 PM

Shritan Varma

Shritan Varma

yeah but lone ranger wasnt that bad

Jul 15 - 08:44 AM

David S.

David Stubbs

Saw Pacific Rim. Good film and Michael Bay should call De Toro to learn how to do robots and fight scenes.

Jul 15 - 10:10 AM

are doubleyou

Ken S

"Grown Ups 2 ... skewed 53% female giving that audience a funny and light alternative to the macho action fare."

Macho action fare? Pacific Rim's biggest ass-kicker is a non-sexualized Japanese woman and opens with a shirtless Charlie Hunnam. That essentially makes it the most woman friendly film this year outside the arthouse.

Jul 14 - 06:40 PM

Gary Devenport

Gary Devenport

That and The Heat and The Great Gatsby to a certain extent.

Jul 14 - 06:49 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

I was under the impression that Adam Sandler is macho fart humor. Since when has he been "lady-friendly"? was it the third or fourth menstration joke in "That's My Boy"?

Jul 14 - 07:51 PM

kinghongkong

Lacuna Matata

Well put Janson...It's not only a sad world when a Sandler movie beats out a Del Toro movie at the box office, but couple that with the fact that his drivel is considered "lady-friendly" and what the hell does that say about our society as a whole. Is this gender equality? The majority of American women are now as ignorant as their cavemen counterparts?

Jul 15 - 09:10 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Thanks. It's an honor to be confirmed by Monica Bellucci licking honey off her own face ;)

Jul 16 - 12:09 AM

McBlaine

Gaylord Focker

There's something unsettling about a person who's always so pleased with themselves. Especially when they appear to live on a nerdfanboy internet film forum, ugh

Jul 17 - 04:15 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Awww. No Monica lick for you.

Jul 17 - 04:41 PM

Lenny M.

Lenny Monroe

Saddened by Pacific Rim's box office performance. I absolutely loved it and that's now my favorite film of tye summer so far but sorry it didn't perform well as it could have. I feel the T-Meter and box office grosses should both be a bit higher but oh well.

Jul 14 - 06:48 PM

inka s.

inka s

This makes me want to throw money at GDT. In that case, time for IMAX!

Jul 15 - 02:58 PM

Valmordas

Val Mordas

How nauseating. Pacific Rim wasn't as good as I'd hoped but still better than these two turds.

Jul 14 - 06:54 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Couldn't get over how boring Charlie Hunum was?
Or how about the ridiculous Sterotypes?
It's like they mined the 80's roster the WWF and threw them in Giant Robots em I right?

Jul 15 - 03:18 PM

Valmordas

Val Mordas

No, not really.

Jul 15 - 09:07 PM

Jeff Goldblum

Jeff Goldbloomer

My ah chest hair could ah write a better movie MOVIE than ah Grown Ups 2.

Jul 14 - 07:05 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

I would watch a film written by Jeff Goldblum's chest hair.

Jul 14 - 07:53 PM

McBlaine

Gaylord Focker

Eww you're utterly gross. Nobody (except you) wants to hear about your faggy fantasies about older men's bodies. Keep it to yourself CHEERs

Jul 17 - 04:18 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

It Gets Better.

Jul 17 - 05:58 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Fantastic.

Jul 15 - 03:18 PM

Keith Hurson

Keith Hurson

Not terribly surprised by these box office results. Knew Pacific Rim wasn't killing it. I saw it Saturday night, and the theater was half empty. Del Toro just can't bring in the dollars. I really want a Hellboy 3, but I don't think it's going to happen. Let alone At The Mouths Of Madness.

Jul 14 - 07:19 PM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

Mountains of Madness, but I get your point. Disappointed that with all the news of movies he chose to turn down that Pacific Room was the one he chose to make. Hopefully he only did Pacific Rim on the promise he'd get to make some Lovecraft goodness.

Jul 15 - 09:07 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

I'm sure that calling "Grown Ups 2" a "family" movie is funnier than any joke in that film. You can go throughout cinema history, and there's never been a time before when "mainstream fare" was defined as "requires no thinking". You're stupid, America. The terrorists won.

Jul 14 - 08:01 PM

Valmordas

Val Mordas

I agree with Janson. Wait, I agree with Janson?

Jul 14 - 08:08 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Hands across Adam Sandler.

Jul 14 - 10:54 PM

Fleming Friis-Jensen

Fleming Friis-Jensen

+1

Jul 15 - 04:58 AM

Captain Terror

Captain Terror

Saw Pac Rim Saturday morning---the guy in front of me buying tickets for Grown Ups 2 was wearing a Jeff Dunham concert T. Yes, I'm generalizing.

Jul 15 - 04:15 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Hey. You have to represent.

Jul 16 - 12:12 AM

Ryan Close

Ryan Close

I am sorely disapointed, I loved despicable me 2 but honestly how and why did people think grown ups 2 coulpd possibly be more entertaining then Pacific Rim?!?! Just blows my mind...

Jul 14 - 08:17 PM

Lenny M.

Lenny Monroe

I agree. Hell, in a worst case scenario, I was expecting people to see Pacific Rim just because of the flashy special effects alone, and that would have been enough to outgross Grown Ups 2.

It's sad that Grown Ups 2 is considered a "family movie", when Del Toro directed Pacific Rim as a family movie. I have not seen Grown Ups 2 but I'm pretty sure that Pacific Rim was for all ages far more than Grown Ups 2.

Jul 14 - 09:11 PM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

Lets not go off here in our rush to rightly eviscerate Adam Sandler and pretend like Pacific Rim was anything special as a movie itself.

Jul 15 - 09:09 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Pretend?

Jul 16 - 12:10 AM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

I saw Pacific Rim and was very disappointed by it. It's a fine big dumb monster movie, but it's still a big dumb monster movie filled with all the cliche's and wooden performances that entails. The one exception was Rinko Kikuchi and Idris Elba. I think the praise we're heaping on Pacific Rim is as much a sign of how much our standards have dipped in the geek world as the money shelled out for GU2 is a sign of how far general audiences have fallen.

Jul 16 - 09:05 PM

Dave J

Dave J

"Pacific Rim" was supposed to be inspired by the old "Godzilla" and "Ultra Man" movies! Of course, you were disappointed since foreign movies was never your thing anyway!

Jul 17 - 01:39 PM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

Actually Dave J, I really like old Godzilla movies and am a big fan of British cinema as well. Maybe I just expected too much from Del Toro, but Pacific Rim for me anyway is no where near as good as obviously Pan's labyrinth or the Hellboy movies, I think it's even a step back from Blade II which was my least favorite movie of his to date.

Jul 17 - 08:24 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Cut it out, BB. Worse than "Blade 2"? "Rim" doesn't have a lot of subtext and stuff, but it's the first major 3D FX extravaganza that didn't feel insulting. It's miles ahead of the Transformers films, or the Marvel films, or the recent Star Trek or Superman films. The script is at least par with the best of those, and visually it's far more awesome than any of them. It put the climax of "Avengers" to shame. After all these years of "what more do you want?" excuses for these brainless, disposable entertainments, we finally got one that truly thrills, and NOW people decide - out of the f'cking BLUE - that they want more than fun FX films? Piss on Whedon for me.

Jul 18 - 03:50 PM

Alberto Zeeky

Alberto Zeeky

There's was a couple of funny bits in Grown Ups 2, not anything special but the jokes directed at the older audience definitely were enjoyable. The first was still better mainly because it had a more focused plot... was more like sitcom this time around.

Pacific Rim was Transformers on steroids, definitely worth an admission ticket and right now should be a front runner for the Oscars visual award. I'll welcome a sequel if Del Torro agrees to come on for director. Here's hoping for strong legs!

Jul 14 - 08:56 PM

CFM

'schak Attack

Alberto saw Grown Ups 2! Alberto saw Grown Ups 2! There he is! Alberto saw Grown Ups 2!

Jul 15 - 07:28 AM

bribios

brian wilson

In other news, Happy Madison has aquired to movie rights to "Ow, My Balls!", the satirical pop culture phenomenon featured in "Idiocracy". Though there aren't a lot of details at this point, a press statement from Happy Madison is promising the movie adaptation will feature a ten minute semen gag filmed as a one shot, along with a scene where Kevin James gets teabagged by Ed Asner for some reason.

As of press time, America shrugged its shoulders and said "Eh, whatever, I'll probably see it. Not every movie has to be an Oscar winner, sometimes you just want to watch something stupid that makes you laugh.". America then stared off at it's own feet, trying not to think about how miserable life is if watching a grown man get pissed on by a deer ends up being the comedic highlight of the year.

Jul 14 - 09:46 PM

Rudi Hoehn

Rudi Hoehn

Can the smart people of the world all agree to see Pacific Rim three times, to make up for the IDIOTS who aren't interested in good movies?

Jul 14 - 10:04 PM

Vince Averello

Vince Averello

I'm up to two showings. Will probably do a third later this week

Jul 15 - 06:03 AM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

Just because Pacific Rim is better and smarter than Grown Ups 2 doesn't mean it was good or smart. It had plenty of its own flaws.

Jul 15 - 09:11 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Not being fun wasn't one of them.

Jul 16 - 12:10 AM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

I'm a little surprised J, Did we enter Bizarro-world here? You being satisfied with a dumb fun movie and me advocating for more art and craft?

Jul 16 - 09:06 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

The beautifully executed FX of "Rim" had plenty of art and craft to it. I also praised ILM for their FX on the Transformers films, but Bay didn't have half a clue what to do with those gifts.

Jul 18 - 03:52 PM

Alex Yohai

Alex Yohai

What makes Pacific Rim a "fanboy" film? It's not based on any previously existing property, at least not directly... is "fanboy" just supposed to mean "sci-fi" now?

Jul 14 - 10:38 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Funny how this limited "fanboy" demographic didn't limit the appeal of "Star Trek" or "Man of Steel", even though neither of those films had as strong a female protagonist as Rinko Kikuchi.

Jul 14 - 10:56 PM

King  S.

King Simba

Because those films actually tried to market themselves outside fanboys (and that was nothing compared to the marketing of the 2009 Star Trek which went out of its way to tell people that it wasn't a film for Trekkies only, even using the tagline "Not you Daddy's Star Trek") Pacific Rim made the same mistake as Sucker Punch in that it was marketed entirely to a demographic that was already sold on the film, which is not something you do for a 200 mil budgeted film. You need to have wide appeal across the border (e.g., aside from Nolan's name being a big draw, Inception had big budget spectacle for young males, Leonardo Dicaprio as a major selling point for females not to mention an emotional hook to the film of the main character trying to get back to his kids, plus the promise of a complex plot to draw in an older more mature audience that normally wasn't into typical summer blockbusters.)

And yeah, Rinko Kikuchi should have been a huge selling point for females, if the trailers had given her screen time. And yet up until a week ago none of the trailers gave any focus on the human characters. By comparison, the first Transformers focused a lot in its marketing on the relatable aspect of a boy getting his first car, while also promising some classic Spielberg moments (e.g., the main character gazing up in awe.)

Jul 15 - 12:34 AM

CFM

'schak Attack

King Simbe, with the Post of the Day! Cheers mate.

Jul 15 - 07:32 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

You're still ignoring that the marketing for this film was done by Warners, who were in a contract dispute with Legendary at the time. No doubt this played a role in Legendary leaving for Universal instead. Warners are idiots for giving up a production company that has provided them with billions of dollars in revenue.

None of this excuses the fact that, given the marketing, people could actually feel as if Sandler had produced a film that was worth their money more than "Rim". The Cinemascore speaks for itself. The mediocre B was the judgement of people who actually chose to pay to see the movie - not critics. These rats can't find the cheese by going down the same tunnel every time.

Jul 15 - 10:01 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

I disagree completely. Faora-Ul was just as bad ass an awesome as Mako. Uhura is SUPPOSE to be an independent empowered female character, I'm not sure why "My boyfriend doesn't love me!" was her character in the film but she still managed to have some moments outside of that, briefly. Amy Adams as Lois Lane was very much....empo...eh.....COME ON MAN ask anyone! Faora-Ul Was BAD ASS!

Jul 15 - 03:25 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Heroine and villain are very different things.

Jul 15 - 03:58 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Agreed

Jul 16 - 04:34 PM

McBlaine

Gaylord Focker

Jason McJinniafgahnistan honestly clearly has no life whatsoever outside of gayboy fantasies about older actors and spamming his pleased-as-punch pseudo phil101 film101 inanities everywhere on this nerdgeekfanboy forum so , frankly, creepy. Just give it a rest mate just for a while. You can comment once or twice max per topic but 50 times? And lace it with homo jibes? Sad

Jul 17 - 04:22 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

You're like that shy kid in the 6th grade who thinks that insulting the pretty girl will get her to notice you.

Jul 18 - 03:54 PM

Alex Yohai

Alex Yohai

What makes Pacific Rim a "fanboy" film? It's not based on any previously existing property, at least not directly... is "fanboy" just supposed to mean "sci-fi" now?

Jul 14 - 10:38 PM

King Crunk

King Crunk

Was hoping Pacific Rim would open a little better, seems to be about even with Del Toro's Hellboy films.

DAYUM! The Lone Ranger is not even tracking to make 100 million in the US. That is truly atrocious. At least John Carter did not have a big star to open it and a name action director behind the helm.

Jul 14 - 10:39 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

John Carter cracked a 280 mill domestic box office. Lone Ranger makes it look like Avengers by comparison.

Jul 14 - 10:50 PM

nongshim

Nong Shim

john carter made like 70 mil domestically and the lone ranger will probably beat that, at the very least. internationally...... it has very little hope

Jul 15 - 10:39 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

You're right. 280 was the global take. My bad.

Jul 15 - 11:52 AM

infernaldude

Infernal Dude

So tweenagers chose potty humor over big robots and this is the fall of cinema? Please. Pacific Rim was doomed to fail just like most of del Toro's other films. What movie has he done that have been box office gold? Even his hits took awhile to recoup. Pacific Rim needed a star. A face and name to hook people. That was their mistake.

Jul 14 - 10:53 PM

King  S.

King Simba

I believe Tom Cruise was initially supposed to play the main character, but he dropped out to do Oblivion.

Jul 15 - 12:35 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Tom Cruise would have nailed it. Idris Elba destroyed Charlie Hunams weak wooden performance. But WOW Admiral Pentecost's hero moment was epic eh? That's not a spoiler right? Thats vague enough. Damn it I LOVE Del Toro's imagination.

Jul 15 - 03:28 PM

King  S.

King Simba

Well, on the bright side at least it did better than what Variety was tracking for the film (a sub 30 mil opening weekend). Plus, it's doing much better overseas, so with good word of mouth and not much competition in the upcoming weekends (RIPD looks like a major bomb) it could close with about 100 mil domestically and 300 mil internationally. It's not going to become a franchise starter, but at least that'll be enough to cover its budget.

I suppose this will be a lesson for the studio in what to avoid when marketing Godzilla (e.g, don't wait until the last week before release to start marketing your film beyond fanboys.)

Looks like people haven't given up on Sandler yet, sadly.

Jul 15 - 12:09 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Godzilla is the last Legendary production that Warners will distribute, so I imagine, now with their relationship faltered, WB won't have much of an incentive.

Jul 15 - 10:06 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

I know a lot of people hated Monsters. I am a product of the effects of wildly insane paranoia over immigration and illegals...so It moved me to tears. I hope the director can do that again with Godzilla. So your saying WB is trying to sabotage Legendary pictures? Why? To what end? I apologize if the answers are common sense. I just don't understand your push to have us all believe this.

Jul 15 - 03:30 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

On the WB/Legendary beef: you just have to read up on it. They had a falling out. Now maybe WB's PR marketing was only in response to their contract negotiations that had gone sour. Maybe now that Legendary has settled at Universal, they'll continue to market the remaining projects in good faith.

On "Monsters": It was a good movie. I wish it had a different name though, because I was expecting some actual Monsters in the film, not just jellyfishes.

Jul 15 - 03:56 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

I will do some reading on the WB/Legendary stuff.

I agree with you on the title. I'm thinking maybe he was just desperate for an audience so named it Monsters. Seriously, there are no Monsters in this movie. I mean that literally and figuratively.

Jul 16 - 04:37 PM

Rebeccachu Elizabeth C.

Rebecca Clark

I am very unhappy at how Pacific Rim got beaten by Grown-Ups 2 @ the Box Office. The fact that more moviegoers went to see a bad sequel to a horrible 2010 film is just depressing. Pacific Rim got much better reviews from critics, and critics gave Grown-Ups 2 a disastrous single-digit number on the T-Meter.

Also, in other words, with Despicable Me 2 still #1 at the box office, Universal literally no longer cares about entertaining moviegoers worldwide. It has not been the powerhouse major movie studio that it used to be in its Golden Years, which ran from 1912 to 2005.

Ever since Paul W.S. Anderson committed the huge crime of killing off Universal's movie-making brilliance with his horrible Death Race remake (and I feel sorry for Jason Statham, Joan Allen, Tyrese Gibson and Ian McShane and the other notable actors who signed on to this POS), he has completely damaged the studio. And ever since then, the studio has never recovered to its former glory.

Now, ever since the dreadful Death Race remake, Universal has changed permanently. Even if it delivers quality films that it releases today (Despicable Me 1 and 2, Bridesmaids, Fast Five, Fast and Furious 6, Ted, Les Miserables 2012, to name a few), they will all never be up to the same caliber and essence as the studios' many movies released during its Classic Era. 2005 was truly the last great year for Universal, and it was its final year for its Golden Run.

However, that being said, I will still plan on checking out the sequel, because I watched the first one on Blu-Ray back in 2011. It's very sad to see a once grand major motion picture studio fall from its glory, and, in the hands of one of the worst movie-makers still working today, die in his pedigree of horrible film-making. Nowadays, Universal's Movie-Making Brilliance is officially gone thanks to Anderson himself. Even if all copies of the Death Race remake were destroyed by an explosion or something, it will not reverse the damage that Anderson did to the studio. Even if PWSA gets fired from movie-making, it won't repair the studio back to its Golden Glory. With this Death Race remake, Anderson has left a huge scar on Universal that will never recover.

It's a very far cry from the studio that once distributed and produced high-quality movies that also made a ton of money at the box office, and some of the movies that Universal produced and distributed during its 93-year, 10-decade Golden Age are iconic, too: Back To The Future, E.T., Jaws, Scarface (1983 remake), Abbott and Costello, Universal Monsters, John Carpenter's The Thing remake, Pillow Talk, Jurassic Park, The 40-Year Old Virgin, and Peter Jackson's King Kong remake, to name a couple.

Aside from a few gems that it released, Universal today is no longer the same. It now produces and distributes terrible, unoriginal movies (see: Identity Thief, Hop (2011 film), Couples Retreat, The Fourth Kind, Leap Year, Land Of The Lost, Skyline, Little Fockers, The Dilemma, Your Highness, The Change-Up, Dream House, The Thing remake/prequel, some movies that it releases today even steal storylines from the Classic Universal era!). The two-year period of 2006-2007 and January 2008 to August 21, 2008, beginning with American Dreamz in April 2006, marked the beginning of the studio's downfall from its glorious pride that it once held. And, Anderson came in and killed it on 8-22-2008.

Nowadays, Universal just wants quantity over quality. It wants to release movies that are plain forgettable, save for a few movies that got good reviews from critics, and just to have them stay at the top of the box office for a few weeks or more. And it's just to add more $$$ to their humongous piggy bank. Universal no longer cares about entertaining moviegoers. It just nowadays wants to care for one single thing to help it stay alive in those times post-Paul W.S. Anderson's Death Race remake: Money.

Jul 15 - 12:09 AM

Valmordas

Val Mordas

You act as if all studios don't sling shit these days. It ain't just Universal, there's more than one poop factory in Hollywood.

Jul 15 - 04:57 AM

Esteban Martinez

Esteban Martinez

So, in short, you hate Paul Anderson. Welcome to the club.

Jul 15 - 10:17 AM

Rebeccachu Elizabeth C.

Rebecca Clark

Thank you so much. ;)

Jul 15 - 06:02 PM

Dick Travis

Mick Travis

The 1932 version of SCARFACE kicks the '83 version's sorry ass.

Jul 18 - 10:42 AM

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