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Box Office Wrapup: Hannah Montana Sings Her Way to the Top

Fast & Furious holds in second, and Dragonball has no power

This weekend the queen of teendom Miley Cyrus flexed her muscles again at the multiplexes with Hannah Montana: The Movie which defeated all competitors for a squeaky clean number one debut over the Easter holiday weekend. Former chart-toppers Fast & Furious and Monsters vs. Aliens kicked in over $20M a piece powering the overall marketplace to its best showing ever for the bunny holiday.

Disney ruled the North American box office with an estimated $34M opening for Hannah over the Friday-to-Sunday period as the actress/rocker's fan base came out in droves. The G-rated film about the popular television character's reconnection to her roots averaged a powerful $10,904 from 3,118 theaters. It was the second biggest opening ever over the Easter holiday frame trailing only 2006's Scary Movie ($40.2M). Hannah also scored the fifth largest April debut after Fast & Furious ($71M), Anger Management ($42.2M), Scary 4, and The Scorpion King ($36.1M).

The teen superstar first proved her box office clout last year with the music pic Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert which debuted at number one over Super Bowl weekend with a stunning $31.1M from only 683 3D venues for an eye-popping $45,561 average. Higher $15 ticket prices, a more narrow release, and the promotion of the film as a one-week-only event made it a unique player at the box office. But Hannah Montana The Movie proved that the tween brand is still strong a year later and that Miley can open a regular film on her own. Cyrus has now seen her last two films both open at number one with $30M+ debuts, something most Hollywood A-listers can't claim. Her talent reps must now see whether she can still open a picture outside of the Hannah Montana franchise. Next up for the sixteen-year-old is The Last Song, based on the Nicholas Sparks novel, which Disney plans to have in theaters next year.

The studio chose Easter weekend for Montana since most of its target audience of school children and parents would have extra time off thanks to schools being closed on Good Friday. That holiday helped propel opening day sales to a stunning $17.3M as intense demand pulled most of the crowd out in the first day. Saturday fell sharply by 40% to $10.3M while Easter Sunday is estimated by Disney to drop by 38% to $6.4M. More than half of the weekend tally was collected on Friday. The audience breakdown had no surprises - 79% of the crowd was female, 60% was under 17, and two-thirds were families.

Dropping back to second place was last weekend's gargantuan opener Fast & Furious which tumbled 59% to an estimated $28.8M in its second lap. The sophomore weekend decline was in line with past films from the franchise as 2003's 2 Fast 2 Furious dropped 63% while 2006's The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift fell by 59%. Neither had a holiday helping the second frame. After ten days, the new Furious has raced to a stunning $118M and should speed past the $127.2M of 2 Fast next weekend before eventually racing ahead of the $144.5M of the original The Fast and the Furious from 2001. A final domestic tally of $160-170M could result for the Vin Diesel-Paul Walker reunion.

Overseas has been on fire too as the Universal smash grossed an estimated $46.5M this weekend from 50 territories to boost the international sum to $91M. The global gross now stands at an incredible $209M after less than two weeks and by the end of this week, the racing sequel will become the highest-grossing installment of the lucrative series on a worldwide basis. Talks have already begun on a fifth chapter starring both leads.

Kids lured in by 3D gimmickry were still lining up for the animated adventure Monsters vs. Aliens which pulled in an estimated $22.6M in its third weekend. Off just 31%, the PG-rated smash posted a great hold and boosted its total to a stellar $141M in 17 days. Monsters is now on the same course as two recent toon sequels that made a killing running only 4% behind the pace of 2006's Ice Age: The Meltdown and 3% ahead of last fall's Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa. Those blockbusters each went on to gross north of $180M domestically and more than $590M worldwide. Meltdown, like Monsters, had Easter to help the third frame but its drop was bigger at 41% and its weekend take was smaller at $20M. By the end of the week, the DreamWorks hit will become the top-grossing film of 2009 and could find its way to the neighborhood of $190M from North America alone.

This weekend underscored how big moviegoing has been this year over holiday sessions. All three holiday frames this year not only beat 2008 numbers, but soared ahead by more than 20% in each case. Compared to last year, 2009's Martin Luther King weekend was up 24%, Presidents' Day frame was up 33%, and the Easter session climbed 26%.

Monsters voice actor Seth Rogen opened a new live-action comedy Observe and Report this weekend, but bowed at number four with a mediocre $11M, according to estimates. The Warner Bros. release averaged a mild $4,085 from 2,727 sites and performed much like the actor's last R-rated laugher Zack and Miri Make a Porno which opened to $10.1M from 2,735 locations last fall. Observe, which co-starred Anna Faris, featured Rogen playing a mall cop battling a streaker menacing his domain. Reviews were mixed.

The two films that followed both enjoyed small declines over the holiday frame. Nicolas Cage's actioner Knowing dipped by only 18% to an estimated $6.7M for Summit boosting the cume to a solid $68M. Paramount's comedy I Love You, Man slid by just 17% to an estimated $6.4M for a $59M total to date. Dropping 40% to an estimated $5.7M was The Haunting in Connecticut which has taken in $46.3M for Lionsgate so far.

Failing to connect with moviegoers was the new sci-fi action pic Dragonball Evolution which limped to a $4.7M debut, according to estimates, putting it in eighth place. The PG-rated film was aimed at young boys but was rejected averaging a weak $2,132 from 2,181 locations for Fox.

Rounding out the top ten were Miramax's Adventureland with an estimated $3.4M and Universal's Duplicity with an estimated $3M. The theme park comedy fell by 40% in its second weekend and lifted its ten-day tally to a disappointing $11.5M while the Julia Roberts spy flick eased by only 28% raising the cume to $36.8M, a low figure for the A-list actress.

The top ten films grossed an estimated $126.4M which was up a scorching 63% from last year when Prom Night opened in the top spot with $20.8M; and up a solid 34% from last year's Easter frame which fell in mid-March when Horton Hears a Who stayed at number one with $24.6M.

MadMan23

MadMan23 on 04-12-2009 06:18 PM

Too bad about Observe and Report, Adventureland, and Duplicity.

Xx MooSE xX

Xx MooSE xX on 04-12-2009 06:23 PM

Saw f & f, cars are fast, vin diesel's furious, and apparently, realistic plots are not required. Still liked it though

Confounded

Confounded on 04-12-2009 06:28 PM

I'd like to see Dragonball fund a sequel with a $4.7m opener. Ha.

brokenwings0207

brokenwings0207 on 04-13-2009 03:46 PM

Confounded: "I'd like to see Dragonball fund a sequel with a $4.7m opener. Ha."

Well, they've already written a script for the sequel and worldwide, they already made about $25 million. You just might see it.

Playboy Slim

Playboy Slim on 04-12-2009 06:38 PM

"Hannah Montanna"...*sigh*.

blattman

blattman on 04-12-2009 11:45 PM

Give it a break. It really was good.

jake l.

jake l. on 04-12-2009 06:38 PM

Adventureland was great, someone dropped the ball on marketing big time

jake l.

jake l. on 04-12-2009 06:39 PM

Adventureland was great, someone dropped the ball on marketing big time

jokerboy1991

jokerboy1991 on 04-12-2009 06:52 PM

Observe and Report was awesome, I saw it twice. Also MOON was great, and no Sci-Fi geek will be disappointed.

Castor Troy

Castor Troy on 04-13-2009 02:05 AM

The whole time while watching this movie, I thought of The Cable Guy... Were you thinking of the same thing?

Duckett H.

Duckett H. on 04-12-2009 06:57 PM

Observe and Report was truly hilarious. I hope people will appreciate its originality more once it reaches DVD.

rockclmbr6

rockclmbr6 on 04-12-2009 07:12 PM

I wish Adventureland was doing better in theaters. It's probably the most poignant teen movie I've ever seen. I loved it.

MizzleBrizzle

MizzleBrizzle on 04-12-2009 07:13 PM

Observe and report was ok. The thing is, IMHO, 40% of the movie was awesome, and the other 60% of the movie was lackluster. The plot was weak in a lot of places, causing the story not to come through all that well in the editing, especially in the beginning. The plot's malaise was almost like what you get in the sort of movie based on an SNL skit, where a lot of scenes aren't set up so that you have a strong sense of how it effects the story and why you're watching it. That said, there were some really funny parts. I think the reason that the tomato rating was so low was the overall lack of strong story lines running through the script that steals the thunder from some good gags.

curtis O.

curtis O. on 04-12-2009 08:09 PM

Observe and Report sucked big time. The movie was about 20% funny and the other 80% was Boring. The movie did not know if itwanted to be a Comedy or drama. it was all over the place and really did not have a point at all. it better be happy it atleast got 11 million.

Chris B.

Chris B. on 04-12-2009 08:11 PM

whoooooooooooooooo! dragonball sucks @!@#!#%^%#. glad to see it fail. i doubt it will teach Fox any lessons though :(

Mr. Bo Ziffer

Mr. Bo Ziffer on 04-12-2009 08:26 PM

I wish I could say that kids today don't know what real entertainment is, seeing as how Hannah Montana took the top spot, but I just realized that a lot of the T.V. shows I watched as a kid suck. Goosebumps, Digimon, CatDog . . . it's a wonder I ended up with as much sanity as I did.

Too bad about Dragonball. I remember a LLLOOONNNGGG time ago when I was obsessed with it, I was reading a Dragonball Z magazine and they talked about how great a live-action movie would be, and they discussed all of the casting choices, and the directors, and special effects, and all that flummery. Cut to eight years later, where I cringe at the site of the trailer and ask "Why?" But that means that there will most likely NOT be a sequel, meaning that there is one less movie by FOX polluting our precious atmosphere.

Zaraki

Zaraki on 04-12-2009 10:38 PM

Don't forget... POWDERED TOAST MAAAAAAAAAAAAN!

Cartoons, and children's entertainment: It's all garbage loaded with advertisements to make kids buy their crap. Hannah Montana has to be the worst, with HSM, for marketing to kids. Pretty much every type of merchandise Disney slapped the Montana name on. Sad, very sad.

Oh, how the mighty of fallen, Disney went from being one of the best family film makers, to complete and utter garbage.

RoadDogXVIII

RoadDogXVIII on 04-13-2009 10:02 AM

Well, at least someone agrees with me.

It's a shame no one sees what happened to the name of Disney. I mean, I watched "Tarzan" the other day, and not once did I feel the need to change the channel or ANYTHING. It may be a G-rated movie, but the visuals, the characters, the music, and the actors were right on the money.

But when you see the Disney Channel, there is NO mention of classic Disney characters. Yeah, we get part of Mickey Mouse's head, and there's some classics aired. But beyond that, you got some of the most vile, inexcusable pieces of entertainment that somehow found their way into the hearts of these fools.

The sitcoms have such lazy attempts at comedy, the characters are borderline aggravating (Walt Disney would NEVER let characters like Hannah Montana, London Titpon, and the "HSM" cast remotely near his presence), the child actors will guarantee a trip to the abortion clinic, and the message is that if you're not one of the pretty people (i.e. Zac Efron/Vanessa Hugdens), then you're doomed to a miserable life. That's what's going on, the majority of characters inhibiting the Mouse House has become self-absorbed tweens. And I can speak on behalf on EVERY single fan of classic Disney, young or adults, that we should bring back Mickey Mouse and the gang from wherever they're held.

You know what else? Pixar is associated with Disney. Considering what's acceptable at the company, the guys behind Toy Story should've left when they had the chance. Here's hoping "Up" does well.

Handheldmidget

Handheldmidget on 04-12-2009 08:39 PM

hey you're shows may have sucked as a kid...they sound like they did....but i feel like the **** i grew up on, Family Matters, MacGyver, Fresh Prince, Full House, A-Team, many more....cartoons...Smurfs, Ninja Turtles, Transformers...blah blah blah, all that nonsense...those were good shows...there is nothing but garbage on now...but from like 1989 to sometime in the 90's there was some quality shows. yea...anyway i am just rambling

TheCaptain of TeamLoyalty

TheCaptain of TeamLoyalty on 04-12-2009 08:52 PM

God i grew up on Chip and Dale Rescue rangers, Talespin, Duck Tales, Darkwing duck, GI Joe, Transformers, Voltron, Thundercats, the Xmen, Spiderman, Captain Planet, etc.

Mr. Bo Ziffer

Mr. Bo Ziffer on 04-12-2009 09:11 PM

I too love all of the shows you two guys mentioned, save for Smurfs and Captain Planet (not racist against blue people or anything). Does anybody here remember Are You Afraid Of The Dark? That show scared me more times than any other horror movie ever produced. EVER!!! Just goes to show that Canadian T.V. is much better than ours (they can say s***)!

Anyway, I had the (dis)pleasure of sitting through an episode of Hannah Montana with my little sister, because it was supposed to be "hilarious"!I've never felt physically uncomfortable by a kid's show before, and I hope I never do again. And this was just a thirty-minute episode! How could any self-respecting film critic give ninety minutes of this a fresh rating. Most likely threats by their own kids to scream or run away from home.

Playboy Slim

Playboy Slim on 04-12-2009 09:21 PM

How any critic said

BY FAR THE BEST MOVIE OF THE YEAR!

I saw it in one of the ads.

IMAmoose24

IMAmoose24 on 04-12-2009 09:33 PM

Are you afraid of the dark was classic. I was watching clips few days ago of the original cast of All That, back with keenan & kel. The good ol days.

ZigBallistic

ZigBallistic on 04-12-2009 10:05 PM

The balls are inert. There I said it. And I will probably go see Moon next week on Jokerboy's recommendation.

HectorMoran91

HectorMoran91 on 04-12-2009 10:36 PM

Well I guess we better start expecting Hannah Montana 2, Fast & Furious 5, and maybe even Monsters v Aliens 2 (although I don't know how that would work).
The only good thing about Dragonball failing is that 20th Century Fox failed.

knowingtoast85

knowingtoast85 on 04-12-2009 11:31 PM

I grew up on Batman: The Animated Series, Animaniacs (and hell, a little Freakazoid too), Ren & Stimpy, MST3K, Inspector Gadget, and of course The Simpsons.

Wow, now I know why I'm so screwed up.

Playboy Slim

Playboy Slim on 04-13-2009 06:26 PM

Wow, that's me EXACTLY!

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