Box Office Guru Wrapup: Twilight Tops Turkey Frame, Muppets & Marty Solid

A hot leftover ruled the Thanksgiving holiday frame despite the opening of three new dishes all aimed at kids and families. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 tumbled 70% in its second weekend but still sold enough tickets to lead the competition with an estimated $42M over the Friday-to-Sunday period. Across the five-day Wednesday-to-Sunday session, the Summit blockbuster pulled in $62.3M bringing the ten-day total to a stellar $221.3M. The drop was identical to the decline that New Moon suffered two years ago on the same weekend. The latest Bella-Edward story is running 4% behind the domestic pace of New Moon which is not bad for the fourth film in a series. But thanks to an accelerated global release schedule, Breaking Dawn's current international cume of $268M (including $71.5M this weekend) is 10% ahead of New Moon's at the same point in time. Worldwide, the new saga's $489.3M is 3% ahead of Moon which ended its run with $713M.

A six-pack of PG-rated films filled up most of the next seven slots as studios all jumped in hoping to grab the attention of families over the long weekend. The marketplace expands over the Thanksgiving frame, but with a flood of product all aiming for the same ticket buyers, not all films survived.

Leading the way with a terrific opening was Disney's The Muppets which debuted in second place with an estimated $29.5M over the Friday-to-Sunday period and $42M over the five-day holiday session starting Wednesday. The critically acclaimed film about the popular puppet group reuniting in order to save their studio averaged a fantastic $8,576 from 3,440 locations over the three-day period and is well-positioned for the rest of the holiday season. Reviews were outstanding and audiences put their thumbs up too as Muppets earned an encouraging A CinemaScore grade which bodes well for word-of-mouth. The numbers were especially impressive given that there were no boosts from 3D or IMAX. Also of note was the film's low reported production cost of only $45M. An extensive and unorthodox marketing push helped Muppets reach a broad spectrum of audiences including kids and adults that remembered the classic television series.

Suffering the worst decline of any holdover in the top ten, the 3D penguin toon Happy Feet Two dropped 37% to an estimated $13.4M and got hit hard by all the new choices for families. By comparison, Thanksgiving weekend drops for recent holdover kidpics were 22% for last year's Megamind, 17% for 2009's Planet 51, 9% for the 2008 sequel Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, and 11% for the first Happy Feet in 2006. The sequel has grossed $43.8M in its first ten days trailing its predecessor by a troubling 56% despite having five years of ticket price increases plus 3D surcharges. Looking at admissions, the new installment has only sold about one-third as many tickets over the same time period. A genuine lack of excitement coupled with bad reviews led to a soft debut and now lukewarm buzz and a wide selection of other options for the target audience has led to moviegoers going elsewhere for their family fun. The road ahead seems grim.

Also suffering from an overcrowded marketplace for kidpics was the yuletide toon Arthur Christmas which bowed to an estimated $12.7M from 3,376 sites for a weak $3,762 average. Over five days the Sony release collected $17M and had to deal with rival family films. In fact, the frame's two other new wide releases Muppets and Hugo each generated a per-theater average that was more than twice as big as Arthur's. However, the road ahead looks rosy for a number of reasons. Reviews were terrific, audience feedback was good with the CinemaScore grade being an A-, and the Christmas storyline will only become more relevant in the coming weeks.

Yuletide kidpics opening in November typically enjoy good legs for weeks while collapsing after December 25. Arthur could patiently sit in multiplexes and reach audiences once they've already seen the more high-profile offerings like Muppets. Studio research showed that 59% of the crowd was female while 69% was 25 and older. Sony projected an aggressive Sunday gross estimating the day will dip only 28% from Saturday. All other films in the top ten estimated Saturday-to-Sunday declines of 42-52%. A British production, Arthur Christmas has already been taking in sales overseas and grossed an estimated $11.9M this weekend from 24 territories for an international total of $22.3M (including $12.7M from the U.K.) and a worldwide take so far of $39.3M.

Martin Scorsese opened his latest film Hugo in fifth place with an estimated $11.4M over three days and a five-day score of $15.4M. It was a strong showing for a film only playing in 1,277 locations as the three-day average of $8,888 was quite impressive. The 3D period film was loved by film critics and despite a slow start with just $1.7M on Wednesday, grew over time thanks to solid buzz to post a fantastic showing over the long weekend as it had to compete with so many other PG-rated films aimed at families. The Oscar winner's first 3D film made remarkable use of the format which moviegoers also responded to as 76% of the gross came from 3D screens. Hugo's good word-of-mouth could help keep it going over the weeks ahead, although profitability will take time given the enormous budget of the effects-filled picture reported to be north of $150M.

Adam Sandler's Jack and Jill followed with an estimated $10.3M, off only 12%, for a $57.4M cume for Sony. Relativity's adventure film Immortals dropped 29% to an estimated $8.8M boosting the 17-day total to $68.6M.

The 3D toon Puss in Boots fell 31% to an estimated $7.5M and has collected $135.4M after its fifth weekend of play. Add in overseas sales of $61.7M and the cat flick has reached $197M worldwide. Universal enjoyed a 3% uptick for its action-comedy Tower Heist which took in an estimated $7.3M for a $65.4M domestic total. The global tally reached the century club with $36.1M from international territories for a worldwide sum of $101.5M.

The George Clooney awards contender The Descendants pulled off a successful expansion widening from 29 sites last weekend to 433 locations over the holiday frame resulting in an estimated three-day gross of $7.2M for a sizzling $16,628 average. Fox Searchlight has banked $10.7M so far and has lots more to go with glowing reviews and positive word-of-mouth sparking more interest. With no real direct competition in the top ten for sophisticated adults, Descendants connected with its target crowd and hopes to win over broader appeal. The film had a planned expansion for December 9 but will now widen a week earlier, this Friday, given the solid demand from theaters in numerous markets that want to open the picture right away.

Fox got some strong buzz going for its Cameron Crowe drama We Bought a Zoo starring Matt Damon thanks to roughly 800 sneak previews on Saturday. The studio reported sell outs in all types of markets throughout the heartland and the coasts with an average capacity of 70-75%. The PG-rated film skewed towards adult women with females making up 57% of the crowd and 65% being 25 and older. An incredibly high 95% of those polled rated the film as "excellent" or "very good" so positive feedback is already building. Zoo still has a long way to go until its opening weekend as it debuts over a crowded Christmas frame on December 23 when there will be an overabundance of product playing to mature adults.

The Michelle Williams film My Week With Marilyn, which has been attracting plenty of Oscar buzz for the actress, debuted outside of the top ten in moderate limited release and saw respectable, though not outstanding, results. The Weinstein Co. release bowed to an estimated $1.8M in 244 theaters for a three-day average of $7,266. The five-day cume since opening on Wednesday was $2.1M. Reviews have been generally good for the film, but exceptional for Williams' performance as Marilyn Monroe. The opening coincided with the expansion of The Descendants which played to much of the same crowd so competition was a factor.

The distributor also opened another film this weekend, the silent movie saga The Artist, which enjoyed an explosive platform debut with an estimated $210,000 from four houses for a scorching $52,500 average. The PG-13 film earned glowing reviews across the board from critics. David Cronenberg's latest A Dangerous Method also debuted in four locations and grossed an estimated $182,000 for a muscular $45,500 average for Sony Classics. Both films will slowly widen their runs in December.

The top ten films grossed an estimated $150M which was down 11% from last year's Thanksgiving holiday when Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 stayed in the top spot with $49.1M; and down 13% from 2009 when The Twilight Saga: New Moon remained at number one with $42.9M.

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Comments

General Wiz

Carlos Flores

No big surprises. I know people who've already seen Twilight 3 times. Honestly, I'm afraid it'll probably win again next week. I saw the Muppets and loved it. However, there wasn't a lot of laughing from other people in the theather in my showing. I haven't seen Hugo yet, unfortunately. I heard they will be expanding more in December. Hopefully it does well. Though, a bad Box office showing could improve it Oscar chances. I hear Arthur Christmas is also brilliant. Maybe I'll see it in theaters too.

Nov 27 - 04:31 PM

King Crunk

King Crunk

No big releases new releases next weekend, so I am hoping The Muppets has a strong hold and dethrones Breaking Dawn.

Nov 27 - 05:05 PM

General Wiz

Carlos Flores

I doubt it will win. Most Familly movies drop at least 45 percent in post thanksgiving weekend. It might have a shot, but I think Breaking dawn will manage to stay on top.

Nov 27 - 05:35 PM

King Crunk

King Crunk

Well Puss in Boots had a miniscule drop a few weeks back thanks to word of mouth, so I am hoping The Muppets can manage the same.

Nov 27 - 07:16 PM

General Wiz

Carlos Flores

Yeah, but that was partly because it's first weekend was on Halloween and there was that snow storm in the North east, so it was a lot less front loaded then it might have been otherwise. I hope your right and Muppet does hold well enough to win, but I don't think will. That's partly because I don't think kids word of mouth will be strong enough. I think most slightly older fans like me loved it for the nonstalgia and the inside jokes that a lot of kids won't get. I don't think, for instance, most kids watch the Big Bang Theory so when adults laughed at a cameo from a Big Bang Actor, the kids will pretty much be clueless at what's going on. As I noted above, there weren't very many laughs in the theather. And when there was a laugh, it was really faint and only lasted a second or two.

Nov 27 - 07:39 PM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

Wow, my experience was completely different. The audience was laughing all the way thru the showing I was at, they found it funnier than I did and I'm a huge Muppets fan. I found this one good, but not great. A wonderful nostalgia piece, but very middle of the road in terms of the franchise. That said, I agree with Krunk, it's got a good chance to catch Twilight next weekend, because Twilight is hemoraging gross, a 70% drop this week and it's not like it's going to get more fans this week. It's not exactly a word of mouth flick. Sadly I missed Hugo this weekend because of a malfunction at the theater, but I've got my free pass and will catch it next weekend.

Nov 28 - 04:59 AM

2d colorblind

2d Colorblind

Some spam from me, too: dear fans, I posted the Afterword. You know what it means. Bye!

Nov 29 - 10:18 AM

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Nov 30 - 06:26 PM

Valmordas

Val Mordas

It's a shame when CRAP like Twilight has multitudes of brainwashed idiots wasting good money on cinematic feces. The Muppets was a much better movie, although it's comparing apples and oranges. In this case, the apple's core is shit.

Dec 2 - 04:58 AM

King Crunk

King Crunk

Figured Breaking Dawn would rule the weekend again. I'm glad The Muppets did good, though, and the excellent word of mouth should keep it in the top ten for a long time. Hugo also did well given the smaller release, but for a film that cost 150 million, it has a long road ahead before it turns a profit. It might just do it if it racks up a few Oscar nominations, though. I saw Tower Heist, and was pleasantly surprised. It was by no means great, but I was fairly entertained, and thought Murphy was pretty good in particular.

Nov 27 - 05:01 PM

Isaac

Isaac H

I agree with you about Tower Heist. I thought it was a very enjoyable action/comedy. I'm rather shocked at Hugo's huge production cost. It had some great set pieces but nothing that I would've thought would push the cost that high. Seems odd that they opened in only 1000 theaters for a film that needs to make so much money. Do you know if it'll be expanding in weeks to come?

Nov 27 - 05:44 PM

King Crunk

King Crunk

Not sure, but I am hoping it does because I would really like to see it.

Nov 27 - 07:15 PM

King  S.

King Simba

I think they're planning on doubling its theater count next week. I think it was a wise move to lower the theater count, and allow the film to build on word of mouth, since Scorsese films rarely open huge, but typically have incredible legs (Hugo is actually the third biggest opening weekend for a Scorsese film behind only Shutter Island and The Departed) Plus this helps it avoid too much competetion with The Muppets.

Nov 28 - 04:34 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

"Hugo" was worth every cent. I hope the international, especially European, markets take up the slack.

Nov 27 - 07:03 PM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

Well it's going to have at least one new viewer this week. I went to see it on Sunday, but the theater had a problem with their reel. Hugo is top of my list for next week though with nothing new coming out that I'm dying to see.

Nov 28 - 05:05 AM

King Crunk

King Crunk

When I went to see Scorsese's Shutter Island, I arrived twenty minutes early to the movie, walk in and the thing is already in the second act. I asked the management if I had been given the wrong theater and that was an earlier showing, but it turns out they had just started the movie thirty minutes early, so everybody who arrived on time missed the beginning.

Nov 28 - 06:12 AM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

I wasn't too upset about it. They gave me my money back and 4 free movie passes (They were only going to give me two until I complained about having to pay for popcorn and soda which I obviously wouldn't have shelled out exorbitant theater prices for if I knew I wasn't going to see a movie. Squeaky wheel gets the grease or in this case the deliciously flavored popcorn butter.)

Nov 28 - 09:14 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

The Scorsese Conspiracy! @Crunk, that's just a lack of professionalism. You seem like a cool dude, but Hell would have been raised that day, my friend! Needless to say, "Hugo" is much better than "Shutter", in fact it's the most powerful Scorsese since his Dylan doc, "No Direction Home". If you aren't a fan of Bob's, I'd have to go back to "Kundun" (which I thought was amazing, Phillip Glass be damned). As much as I like "Aviator" and "Departed", neither one affirms the spirit the way "Hugo" does. And, Bigbro, was it a problem with the 3D or the film itself? They don't exactly use 'reels' much anymore, but I don't know, maybe Marty's keeping it old school like that.

Nov 28 - 09:56 AM

King Crunk

King Crunk

@Bigbrother- I recieved a free ticket for the Shutter Island debacle, but I used it to see the movie again so I could watch the beginning! Luckily I had read the book long before seeing the movie, and could keep up with what was going on at the part I walked in on. @Jason - I want to see Hugo, but the theater near me is not showing it at the moment. If it continues to expand, I'll definitely catch it. Also, I enjoyed all of those Scorses films you mentioned. Like I said above, I was a fan of Shutter Island before it was even a movie, and I love Bob Dylan, am a sucker for a good crime movie, and find Howard Hughes to be a fascinating character.

Nov 28 - 01:56 PM

Valmordas

Val Mordas

Shutter Island gave away it's ending way too soon. I had read the book, so I knew what was going to happen, but my father who was with me had not - and he figured it out before the end. Dicaprio was the wrong choice for the role, but the rest of the cast seemed to fit. It was decent, but it could have been much better.

Dec 2 - 05:02 AM

Cal

Cal Erstein

I don't normally promote videos, but after seeing The Muppets I immediately emailed and facebooked. That movie was funny, sweet, and just what I've been missing from the Muppets for over a decade... All that pent-up fandom needed to go SOMEWHERE!

Nov 27 - 11:27 PM

Sean Y.

Sean Y.

Good to see things looking good for the new releases.

By the way, Gurur.

Nov 27 - 05:05 PM

General Wiz

Carlos Flores

Yeah, that's RT after a long weekend.

Nov 27 - 05:37 PM

Stepping Razor

Stepping Razor

A long weekend... and a lot of "spiked" egg nog. ;)

Nov 28 - 08:33 AM

Superzone

Link O'Fett

Who the hell went to Twilight over the weekend instead of The Muppets? WTF is wrong with this country...

Nov 27 - 05:21 PM

ap sirius

karl anderson

The problem is half the population is female.....lol

Nov 27 - 05:40 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

That's no reason to miss the "Me Party"!

Nov 27 - 07:01 PM

Valmordas

Val Mordas

Being female doesn't explain just how stupid you would need to be to find Twilight worth watching.

Dec 2 - 03:51 PM

King  S.

King Simba

While it may seem a surprise, given all the acclaim it's getting, don't forget a lot of people don't check reviews. In fact, I'm actually impressed with the performance of the Muppets. It was coming from a franchise that had been reduced to cheap TV specials for the past decade. Plus even the Muppet films that were released in theaters (with the excpetion of the first) were only modest hits. The Muppets had the difficult task of trying to appeal to a new audience as well as keeping the old fans, and all things considered I think it did really well. Expecting it to compete with one of the current hottest franchises is not really fair (though at least it will have much better legs)

Nov 28 - 04:31 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

I would LOVE to go watch the Muppets, but hell no I'm not watching it over here dubbed. I'll rent it sometime afterwards. Anyways, I'm just glad the Muppets did great, & I knew BD would dominate the box office, as always.

Nov 27 - 05:25 PM

popyea

nick mckergow

holy crap her pants are short.

Nov 27 - 05:36 PM

ap sirius

karl anderson

nothing nicer than a cute pair of short shorts

Nov 27 - 05:42 PM

manwithoutfear19

Daniel Raimondi

kristen stewart looks really pretty in this pic

Nov 27 - 08:40 PM

Stepping Razor

Stepping Razor

I will admit, every time I see this pic, I think, "That Kristen Stewart does look very yummy in this photo..." but not delectable enough for me to go see the movie.

Nov 28 - 08:34 AM

redrooster0

Charlie Voelker

Muppets was the best family movie since Toy Story 3, funny thing was there were more adults in my theater than kids.

Nov 27 - 05:40 PM

Isaac

Isaac H

I saw both Muppets and Hugo this weekend. I guess I'm the only one who thought The Muppets was just okay. It was still enjoyable enough, but I don't see where it got the 98% T-meter from. I loved Hugo, though, and I'm hoping it widens its release and attracts a larger audience in the weeks to come. It deserves it. Check out my reviews for both those movies on my profile.
I'm planning on seeing Arthur Christmas closer to the big holiday.

Nov 27 - 05:42 PM

Jaxx Raxor

Adam Jones

The Muppets average rating is 8.0, which is generally more typical of a film in the high 80s to low 90s, not the near universe acclaim that 98% looks like. For comparison, the Artist, at 97% has a 8.7 average rating.

I think most of the reviews for the Muppets have been ok to great, but not outstanding. Very few critics see the film as mediocre or worse. It's just how some films are.

Nov 27 - 07:24 PM

Isaac

Isaac H

I gave Muppets a 6/10, which I deem "satisfactory". Even with the lower-than-usual average rating I still enjoyed it significantly less than most...weird.

Nov 27 - 07:26 PM

Bigbrother

Big Brother

Think the Muppets pulls off the trick of making you feel bad for not buying into it which explains the 97% without glowingly high scores. Plus, I think a lot of critics were like me and just happy to see them back on the screen regardless.

Nov 28 - 05:02 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

The hype has inspired a lot of coercive behavior in its fans. Some people will not take less than 'masterpiece' as an adequete answer. When did 'very enjoyable' become not good enough?

Nov 28 - 10:02 AM

Christopher256G

Christopher Greffin

I haven't seen either yet but yhe fact that Hugo got an 85 on Metacritic to me is more impressive than the Muppets getting a 98% on RT. RT ratings don't really get into the nuance of what critics think. I believe from what I've heard that Hugo is the movie to see. Hugo and the Descendants are the two movies I have to check out.

Nov 27 - 09:05 PM

Stepping Razor

Stepping Razor

Exactly.

People need to read individual reviews (or at least the little blurbs/summaries by the critics on RT) to get a better idea of how good/OK/bad a movie is.

I like RT as a compiler of different reviews, but not for its Tomatometer, which either sways too high or too low due to the way they calculate it. They practically give everything a fresh OR a rotten, with little in between, so that's why the meter often looks inflated or deflated. Metacritic tends to be more accurate.

Also, people need to understand that 98 percent doesn't mean the movie itself is a 98 out of 100, but simply that the majority of critics gave it a positive review. A 70 fresh pretty much gets the same play as a 95 fresh.

Nov 28 - 08:39 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

It's always a good sign when a film pisses off just the 'right' critics anyway.

Nov 28 - 09:44 AM

Isaac

Isaac H

I understand what the 98% means, but I would think that in order for that many critics to like the movie it would have to be above the 6/10 that I got from The Muppets, and usually the average score IS around 8.5-9/10.

Nov 28 - 03:26 PM

That Random Albino Kid

Dominic Dold

I saw Hugo while my cousins saw Twilight... you can probably tell I'm nothing like my cousins

Nov 27 - 06:24 PM

Stepping Razor

Stepping Razor

Are you all female?

Nov 28 - 08:40 AM

TheAnimatorRator

Megan Gierasch

That pisses me off, but really no surprise (regretably).
I saw 3 films this week. Muppets. Arthur. Hugo.
All were brilliant. All were far more deserving in attention than the slop from the previous week. *shakes head in despair*. Oh well, everything should show legs supposedly.

Nov 27 - 06:30 PM

merrygoround

Josh Hoffman

The Muppets had slow moments but it was still very good because it was filled with some WONDERFUL songs. I want to see Hugo sometime soon, and chances are I'll never see Breaking Dawn.

Nov 27 - 06:30 PM

The Dude

Gene Arnold

I need to see The Muppets and Hugo man. Breaking Dawn is something that must be stopped. Now!

Nov 27 - 06:31 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

"Hugo" was a masterpiece. I've already written a review of Melies' excellent collection. As a tribute to his early, extraordinary films, it is a far more powerful and poignant assertion of the powers of the imagination (magic) than any family film I've seen in a while. Although I also greatly enjoyed "The Muppets", it couldn't really compare, but it did have a great parody of the "hard and cynical" direction that much of kids' entertainment in the last 10-15 years has gone, exactly the kind of Shreky entertainment - glib and materialistic - that I was afraid would infect Henson's moral and magical legacy. The problem was it had too many humans, who hogged all the original music (No Dr. Teeth number?!? For what, Starship?!?! Curses!), and the dance numbers were tedious. If humans were as happy and zestful as this Smalltown represents, we wouldn't need the Muppets in the first place! The ending was overkill, sweetness to the point of cavities. But a touching tribute for the most part. "Hugo" is far more, an exaltation of human spiritual vision. After watching it, I cannot think of anything more irrelevent than box office. Even if it loses money, it is a gift. I'm far more thankful it was made than I would be if it was #1 among the distracted status-addicted masses.

Nov 27 - 06:58 PM

JC Martel

JC Martel

Cartoons, kid movies, tween movies, pg 13 retarded comedies and most of this shit in 3d...That's the top ten movies at the box office. I'm seeing Raiders of the lost ark at my local theater tomorrow night thank God.

Nov 27 - 07:09 PM

King  S.

King Simba

Considering the three "kid" films that debuted this week (two of which appeal more to adults than kids) all have ratings most adult films would kill for, I don't see how anyone can complain. Besides, not all of the films in the top ten are kid or tween targetted. Don't forget The Descendants. Also, given how strong their per theater averages were A Dangerous Method and The Artist could very well grab a spot in the top ten as well when they start to expand. All in all, this is one of the best weekends quality wise in a long time.

Nov 28 - 03:54 AM

Jeremy D.

Jeremy Dion

I'm glad the Muppets did so well! Me and my friends laughed the whole time! I thought it was brilliant. Sorry to dissapoint the ones who liked the movie, but I really didn't enjoy Hugo as much as I wanted too. The 3D was superb (probably the best non-animated 3D movie in the way it uses the medium)! I also really enjoyed the parts about Melies (I'm studying in cinema so I found it fascinating). The thing that bugged me: I hated the Hugo character! He got on my nerves the whole movie. I didn't think the young actor did the character justice, he just came off as whiny and pointless to me. The supporting cast was great but I couldn't stand Hugo. I wanted for him to get run over by that train!! I also found the movie a bit too long. I felt bad for those kids who were probably expecting an epic adventure story... It was a decent movie but it wasn't as good as I expected. See it for the eye-candy and the homage to Melies.

Nov 27 - 09:31 PM

derek t.

derek tripp

Why is Hugo only showing in 1,277 theaters? Is Paramount waiting untill next week for things to die down a little from the steller releases this week?

Nov 27 - 11:36 PM

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