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Keyser Söze
Quality is a great business plan
Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2007 9:21 pm Posts: 6713
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: The Ugly Truth passes $100 million OS
Awesome week for Up. It made 15M from UK over past week. So the holidays really helped it. It looks like making around 370-375M without japan.
_________________ The world is all about mind and matter, I don't mind and U don't matter
I used to be shawman.
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Sun Nov 01, 2009 7:28 pm |
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Dr. Lecter
You must have big rats
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 4:28 pm Posts: 92093 Location: Bonn, Germany
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"While Michael Jackson remains reasonably popular domestically, he is boxoffice catnip abroad.
Sony's "This Is It," Jackson's posthumously released concert rehearsal film, blanketed the foreign circuit over the last five days, opening at some 9,200 screens in 108 overseas territories for a commanding No. 1 boxoffice tally of $68.5 million.
That's more than double the film's $32.5 million five-day boxoffice figure in the U.S. and Canada from a total of 5,500-6,000 screens at 3,481 sites. Sony said that "This Is It's" robust foreign launch is the fifth biggest of 2009.
Worldwide, the film played at more than 15,000 situations for a global opening launch of $101 million.
The top five foreign markets for "This Is It" were Japan ($10.4 million from 332 locations), the U.K. ($7.6 million from 806 sites), Germany ($6.3 million from 930 screens), France ($5.8 million from 483 sites) and Australia ($3.6 million from 284 locations).
"This Is It" rolled out Wednesday in 97 overseas markets day-and-date with its domestic bow, with remaining offshore engagements kicking off on the subsequent two days. It finished No. 1 in most of the foreign markets it played and resoundingly inaugurated the fall-winter holiday season abroad.
After five stanzas in the No. 1 spot on the foreign circuit, Pixar/Disney's "Up" finished second with $12.8 million drawn from 4,700 screens in 27 territories, pushing its overseas cume to $352.7 million and its global gross total to $645.6 million. Disney says "Up" now ranks as the third most popular studio animation title ever. It still trails the $415 million overseas total logged by Pixar/Disney's 2007's hit "Ratatouille."
Tied for third place with weekend tallies of $6.1 million each are two other Disney releases: "G-Force" and "Surrogates." The former, an animation outing from producer Jerry Bruckheimer, played 2,735 screens in 32 territories and pushed its overseas cume to $148 million and its worldwide figure to $267 million.
"Surrogates," a sci-fi title starring Bruce Willis, opened at No. 2 in the Paris area and played at 1,963 situations in 38 markets overall for an overseas total of $60.3 million.
Finishing fourth overall and No. 2 in France was "Le petit Nicolas," a Wild Bunch Distribution release of a live-action film based on a French children's book. The fifth weekend drew $5.6 million 628 spots, a 25% increase from the prior weekend. Market cume so far is $37.1 million.
No. 5 was "Kniga masterov" (Book of Masters), a local-language title released solely in Russia, Disney's first branded local market production ever. The fairy-tale fantasy directed by Vadim Sokolovsky drew $5.2 million from 750 locations, ranking a dominant No. 1 in the territory. Disney said the title's opening gross is the biggest of any family-oriented release ever in Russia.
"Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs," Sony's animation release about food falling from the sky, generated $4.9 million from 2,645 sites in 43 markets for a foreign cume of $52.2 million.
The Weinstein Co.//Universal's "Inglourious Basterds" drew $3.9 million from 2,400 situations in 50 territories, pushing its foreign cume to $179.5 million and its worldwide total to $299 million. The World War II drama from director Quentin Tarantino still has five more territories to play, including Japan on Nov. 20.
"The Ugly Truth," Sony's romantic comedy co-starring Katherine Heigl and Gerard Butler, bagged $3.4 million from 1,710 screens in 57 territories, boosting its international cume to $107.4 million.
Mandate International's horror outing "Saw VI" is on track to gross $3.3 million from some 1,200 screens for an international cume of $8.6 million in 10 days. In the U.K., Fox's "Fantastic Mr. Fox," an animation comedy from director Wes Anderson, finished its second weekend in the No. 3 spot with a weekend tally of $2.4 million from 486 locations for a market cume of $9 million.
In France, Warner Bros. opened "Micmacs a tire-larigot," a fantasy-tinged satire on the world arms trade co-scripted and directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, best known for his 2001 hit "Le fableux destin d'Amelie Poulain." Starring French actor-director Dany Boon, "Micmacs" premiered No. 3 in the market with $4.8 million from 650 screens.
No. 5 in France was UGC's "Lucky Luke," which in its second round dipped a relatively benign 28%, drawing $4.2 million from 687 screens for a 10-day market cume of $12 million. The film is a Western, a live-action adaptation of a French comic book character, a gunslinger played by Jean Dujardin.
Other international cumes: New Line/Warner Bros.' "The Final Destination," $112.8 million; Sony's "Julie & Julia," $24.6 million; Universal's "Couples Retreat," $21.9 million (after a $2.3 million weekend at 1,010 screens in 11 markets); Fox's "Jennifer's Body," $10.4 million; Universal's "Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant," $7 million; Fox's "Agora," $25 million (from Spain only); Universal's "Fast & Furious," $205.3 million; Fox's "Aliens in the Attic," $33.8 million; Universal's "The Invention of Lying," $9.6 million (over 31 days in U.K. and Ireland); Sony's "District 9," $84.5 million; Focus Features/Universal's "9," $6.1 million (Universal territories only); Fox's "(500) Days of Summer," 419.6 million; and Universal's "De Storm," $5.9 million from The Netherlands and Belgium only). "http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/con ... c4f3fa76a8__________________________________________________________________________________
_________________The greatest thing on earth is to love and to be loved in return!
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Mon Nov 02, 2009 12:25 pm |
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Dr. Lecter
You must have big rats
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 4:28 pm Posts: 92093 Location: Bonn, Germany
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Solid, but not overwheming start for This Is It. It should end up with $210-240 million WW, I think. With all the hype this had to be expected at least.
Very good for Up. With Japan still ahead it'll definitely pass $400 million and should squeeze past Ratatouille. I think it'll end up with about $720 milion worldwide which is quite amazing, but not on the same level as Ice Age 3. Still, that'll make it the 2nd-biggest Pixar release ever worldwide.
Surrogates is saving some face overseas. With several major markets still ahead (like Germany and Japan), I think $100 million overseas is achievable. It still won't break even while in theatres, but it might on DVD now.
G-Force is quite big overseas too. It only has Japan left and should end up with around $300 million worldwide, methinks.
The Ugly Truth is almost at $200 million now and should pass it next weekend. Quite a terrific performance for the critically slammed flick. Seems to enjoy good WoM among audiences. I'm surprised how close it'll end up getting to The Proposal overseas. Around $210-215 million worldwide should happen for it.
Inglourious Basterds will be above $300 million by the end of the next weekend and with Japan still ahead, I think it can actually top $200 million overseas, making it a bigger gross aboard than Wolverine, Monsters Vs. Aliens or G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra. Wow.
The Final Destination also keeps going on well with almost $180 million worldwide already. It'll soon top The Grudges $187 million WW total to become the highest-grossing horror movie worldwide since The Village (or The Ring if you don't count The Village). It'll also pass The Ring's overseas total of $120 million. Amazing run.
District 9 has just hit $200 million worldwide. It still has Japan left and should wraup up its run with around $210-215 million worldwide which is great on its $30 million budget.
_________________The greatest thing on earth is to love and to be loved in return!
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Mon Nov 02, 2009 12:42 pm |
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Kris K
Horror Hound
Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2004 1:44 pm Posts: 6228
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
Nice for Jennifer's Body, which should do well in the Uk this weekend. It'll do about $35-40M WW, and won't be much of a loss for the studio, considering it's $16M budget.
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Mon Nov 02, 2009 1:46 pm |
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Dr. Lecter
You must have big rats
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 4:28 pm Posts: 92093 Location: Bonn, Germany
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
In Germany Up is somewhat of a disappointment in admissions and is clearly tracking behind WALL-E. It'll barely pass 3 million admissions, I think (half of Ratatouille's). In UK, however, it is really HUGE: http://movies.nytimes.com/pages/movies/ ... index.htmlBarely down from last week, it is at almost £30 million now. Ice Age 3 will fall soon and I believe this has a small chance at £40 million now, though £38 million looks more likely.
_________________The greatest thing on earth is to love and to be loved in return!
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Wed Nov 04, 2009 7:29 pm |
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Kris K
Horror Hound
Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2004 1:44 pm Posts: 6228
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
Yeah, it was a holiday in the UK last weekend, that explains why nothing dropped really.
Most films will nose-dive this weekend, it always happens.
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Wed Nov 04, 2009 9:27 pm |
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Dr. Lecter
You must have big rats
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 4:28 pm Posts: 92093 Location: Bonn, Germany
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
I'm still shocked at how well Fame has performed in the UK. How come?
_________________The greatest thing on earth is to love and to be loved in return!
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Wed Nov 04, 2009 9:50 pm |
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Kris K
Horror Hound
Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2004 1:44 pm Posts: 6228
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
It got alot of marketing and strong reviews.
I can't beleive it was Number 1 for 2 weeks though.
It must have been younger people going to see it, cause nobody I know has.
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Wed Nov 04, 2009 10:00 pm |
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mark66
Extraordinary
Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2005 2:41 pm Posts: 13054 Location: Augsburg (2,040 years young)
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
The news for "A Christmas Carol" was somewhat better overseas, where the debut grossed $18 million in 12 markets, led by Mexico and British. Disney reported that the total is 50% more than what "The Polar Express" opened to in the same countries. The studio is now left to hope that future foreign openings will be strong and that it will decline slowly domestically, although turning it into a financial success after such a weak start will be tough. Sony's Michael Jackson movie, "This Is It," ... Thus far, the picture, for which Sony paid $60 million, has sold $57.9 million worth of tickets domestically and $128.6 million internationally. http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/enterta ... ox_office/
_________________ Nothing Compares 2 U
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Sun Nov 08, 2009 2:17 pm |
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Keyser Söze
Quality is a great business plan
Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2007 9:21 pm Posts: 6713
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
Quote: 'This Is It' tops overseas boxoffice Michael Jackson doc stays at No. 1 with another $29 million
Nov 8, 2009, 04:08 PM ET Despite a 58% drop in weekend boxoffice on the foreign circuit, Sony's release of "This Is It" with Michael Jackson maintained its hold on the No. 1 spot overseas, generating $29 million from 8,800 screens in 110 markets for an offshore total of $128.6 million -- more than double its domestic take.
Finishing No. 2 on the weekend was director Robert Zemeckis' 3D performance-capture version of Disney's "A Christmas Carol" starring Jim Carrey as Ebenezer Scrooge, which drew $12 million in its opener at 2,750 screens in 18 territories for a per-screen average of $4,364.
Disney said that "3D was a significant factor, accounting for 62% of our total result from only 37% of the screens." The latest version of Charles Dickens' frequently filmed 1843 novella opened at No. 1 domestically and has collected a worldwide tally of $43 million so far.
Driving "Christmas Carol" were strong opening numbers in the U.K. and in Mexico. Disney says that "on a consolidated basis in the same bucket of territories, the $12 million take was the best ever achieved by a Robert Zemeckis film." The take was 50% bigger than that of "The Polar Express," Zemeckis' 2004 Christmas season title in 3D.
This week, "Christmas Carol" opens in Spain, Japan and Colombia.
"This Is It," which finished at No. 2 in the U.S. and Canada on the weekend, opened in just one new territory (Vietnam), indicating that Jackson's posthumously released concert rehearsal film showed decent staying power in holdover markets. Worldwide, "This Is It" has accumulated $186.9 million.
No. 1 finishes were recorded in Japan ($4.1 million from 322 locales, down just 28% from the opening weekend), France ($2.7 million from 463 screens), Germany ($2.55 million from 926 sites), the U.K. ($2.2 million from 806 locales) and Australia ($1.7 million from 292 situations). Sony says "This Is It" finished in first place in China and Holland as well but in sixth place in Italy, fifth in Spain and third in Brazil.
The doc's top five markets in terms of cumulative grosses are Japan ($23.6 million), the U.K. ($13.3 million), Germany ($11 million), France ($10.6 million) and Australia ($6.6 million).
Interestingly, the weekend's No. 2 film in France was "Le Concert," a EuropaCorp. release that opened to $2.3 million from 400 sites. It has nothing to do with the Michael Jackson title, however. It's a French-Russian co-production about a sacked Bolshoi Orchestra conductor who conspires with other discharged friends to mount a concert in Paris. The Weinstein Co. has U.S. release rights.
Third on the weekend was Pixar/Disney's "Up," which boosted its international total to $367 million -- $48 million shy of the total recorded by Pixar/Disney's "Ratatouille" - thanks to an $8.4 million weekend at 4,278 screens in 26 markets. A Japan opening is set for Dec. 5.
No. 4 was Universal's "Couples Retreat," the Vince Vaughn comedy, which lured $5.7 million from 1,596 situations in 18 territories for an overseas cume of $28.8 million. A second-place Germany introduction produced $2.8 million from 338 sites, per the distributor.
Fifth was Universal's release of Michael Mann's period drama "Public Enemies" with Johnny Depp, which resurfaced in Italy. A No. 1 opening there furnished the weekend's total action, $3.5 million from 319 locales, which raised the international cume to $104.3 million. Japan opens Dec. 12.
Premiering at No. 1 in Spain was "Celda 211" (Cell 211), a Spanish-language thriller starring Carols Bardem that was acquired and released by Paramount. Director Daniel Monzon's film version of an F.P. Gandull novel about a prison guard who gets sucked into a prison riot opened to $1.7 million from 220 sites.
Opening ninth in France was the latest title from 87-year-old French director Alain Resnais ("Hiroshima Mon Amour," "Last Year in Marienbad"). "Les herbes folles" (Wild Grass), a drama involving a male-female couple and a lost wallet, bowed via Studio Canal to $1.5 million from 300 location.
Other weekend action and cumes: Disney's "G-Force," $2.9 million from 2,227 screens in 28 markets, cume $153.5 million; Disney's "Book of Masters," $2.7 million from 691 sites in Russia (where it ranked No. 1), cume $9.2 million; Sony's "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs," $2.7 million from 2,180 screens in 35 territories, cume $57.8 million; and Weinstein/Universal's "Inglourious Basterds," $2.6 million from 1,943 sites in 43 markets, cume $183.7 million over 12 rounds.
Also, Disney's "Surrogates," $2.4 million from 1,812 screens in 38 territories, cume $64.5 million; Sony's "Julie & Julia," $2.4 million from 960 sites in 39 markets, cume $27.8 million; New Line/Warner's "The Final Destination," $2.3 million from 1,540 situations in 39 territories, cume $116.1 million; Fox's "Jennifer's Body," $2.29 million from 885 screens in 22 markets, cume $13.8 million; and Warner's "Micmacs a tire-larigot," $2 million from 618 sites in France, market cume, $7.5 million.
Other international cumes: Sony's "The Ugly Truth," $110.7 million; Fox's "Aliens in the Attic," $34.3 million; Universal's "Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant," $9.7 million; Fox's "(500) Days of Summer," $21.2 million; Wild Bunch Distribution's "Le petit Nicolas," $40.8 million (in France only); Fox's "Fantastic Mr. Fox," $11.1 million (over three U.K. frames); UGC's "Lucky Luke," $14.8 million over three France frames; and Fox's "Agora," $27.3 million over five frames in Spain only.
_________________ The world is all about mind and matter, I don't mind and U don't matter
I used to be shawman.
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Sun Nov 08, 2009 5:28 pm |
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Keyser Söze
Quality is a great business plan
Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2007 9:21 pm Posts: 6713
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It leads, Up hits $350m overseas!
Not bad for TII. Looks like making 150-175M if extended run helps it.
Average opening for Carol mimicking its domestic opening. it will need robust dvd sales to break even for the studio.
Good weekend for Up. It looks like making 380-385M without japan and now its lock to beat Ratatouille's OS gross. It should beat TF2's OS gross to certainly finish Top 5 OS for the year. Only 2012/Avatar has a chance to beat its OS number.
_________________ The world is all about mind and matter, I don't mind and U don't matter
I used to be shawman.
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Sun Nov 08, 2009 5:34 pm |
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Dr. Lecter
You must have big rats
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 4:28 pm Posts: 92093 Location: Bonn, Germany
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HollywoodReporter updated its article "Despite a 58% drop in weekend boxoffice on the foreign circuit, Sony's release of "This Is It" with Michael Jackson maintained its hold on the No. 1 spot overseas, generating $29 million from 8,800 screens in 110 markets for an offshore total of $128.6 million -- more than double its domestic take. Finishing No. 2 on the weekend was director Robert Zemeckis' 3D performance-capture version of Disney's "A Christmas Carol" starring Jim Carrey as Ebenezer Scrooge, which drew $12 million in its opener at 2,750 screens in 18 territories for a per-screen average of $4,364. Disney said that "3D was a significant factor, accounting for 62% of our total result from only 37% of the screens." The latest version of Charles Dickens' frequently filmed 1843 novella opened at No. 1 domestically and has collected a worldwide tally of $43 million so far. Driving "Christmas Carol" were strong opening numbers in the U.K. and in Mexico. Disney says that "on a consolidated basis in the same bucket of territories, the $12 million take was the best ever achieved by a Robert Zemeckis film." The take was 50% bigger than that of "The Polar Express," Zemeckis' 2004 Christmas season title in 3D. This week, "Christmas Carol" opens in Spain, Japan and Colombia. "This Is It," which finished at No. 2 in the U.S. and Canada on the weekend, opened in just one new territory (Vietnam), indicating that Jackson's posthumously released concert rehearsal film showed decent staying power in holdover markets. Worldwide, "This Is It" has accumulated $186.9 million. No. 1 finishes were recorded in Japan ($4.1 million from 322 locales, down just 28% from the opening weekend), France ($2.7 million from 463 screens), Germany ($2.55 million from 926 sites), the U.K. ($2.2 million from 806 locales) and Australia ($1.7 million from 292 situations). Sony says "This Is It" finished in first place in China and Holland as well but in sixth place in Italy, fifth in Spain and third in Brazil. The doc's top five markets in terms of cumulative grosses are Japan ($23.6 million), the U.K. ($13.3 million), Germany ($11 million), France ($10.6 million) and Australia ($6.6 million). Interestingly, the weekend's No. 2 film in France was "Le Concert," a EuropaCorp. release that opened to $2.3 million from 400 sites. It has nothing to do with the Michael Jackson title, however. It's a French-Russian co-production about a sacked Bolshoi Orchestra conductor who conspires with other discharged friends to mount a concert in Paris. The Weinstein Co. has U.S. release rights. Third on the weekend was Pixar/Disney's "Up," which boosted its international total to $367 million -- $48 million shy of the total recorded by Pixar/Disney's "Ratatouille" - thanks to an $8.4 million weekend at 4,278 screens in 26 markets. A Japan opening is set for Dec. 5. No. 4 was Universal's "Couples Retreat," the Vince Vaughn comedy, which lured $5.7 million from 1,596 situations in 18 territories for an overseas cume of $28.8 million. A second-place Germany introduction produced $2.8 million from 338 sites, per the distributor. Fifth was Mandate International's horror sequel "Saw VI," which opened in six markets, including France (No. 5 in the Paris area), the U.K. (No. 9), Japan and Brazil for an estimated $4.7 million from 1,700 screens, pushing its overseas cume to $16.8 million.
Universal's release of Michael Mann's period drama "Public Enemies" with Johnny Depp resurfaced in Italy. A No. 1 opening there furnished the weekend's total action, $3.5 million from 319 locales, which raised the international cume to $104.3 million. Japan opens Dec. 12.
Overture Films' "The Men Who Stare at Goats" opened abroad via Mandate International on the weekend in the U.K. (where it ranked No. 2), Italy and in Italian-speaking Switzerland. The Iraq war comedy starring George Clooney drew an estimated $3 million from 650 screens. Premiering at No. 1 in Spain was "Celda 211" (Cell 211), a Spanish-language thriller starring Carols Bardem that was acquired and released by Paramount. Director Daniel Monzon's film version of an F.P. Gandull novel about a prison guard who gets sucked into a prison riot opened to $1.7 million from 220 sites. Opening ninth in France was the latest title from 87-year-old French director Alain Resnais ("Hiroshima Mon Amour," "Last Year in Marienbad"). "Les herbes folles" (Wild Grass), a drama involving a male-female couple and a lost wallet, bowed via Studio Canal to $1.5 million from 300 location. Other weekend action and cumes: Disney's "G-Force," $2.9 million from 2,227 screens in 28 markets, cume $153.5 million; Disney's "Book of Masters," $2.7 million from 691 sites in Russia (where it ranked No. 1), cume $9.2 million; Sony's "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs," $2.7 million from 2,180 screens in 35 territories, cume $57.8 million; and Weinstein/Universal's "Inglourious Basterds," $2.6 million from 1,943 sites in 43 markets, cume $183.7 million over 12 rounds. Also, Disney's "Surrogates," $2.4 million from 1,812 screens in 38 territories, cume $64.5 million; Sony's "Julie & Julia," $2.4 million from 960 sites in 39 markets, cume $27.8 million; New Line/Warner's "The Final Destination," $2.3 million from 1,540 situations in 39 territories, cume $116.1 million; Fox's "Jennifer's Body," $2.29 million from 885 screens in 22 markets, cume $13.8 million; and Warner's "Micmacs a tire-larigot," $2 million from 618 sites in France, market cume, $7.5 million. Other international cumes: Sony's "The Ugly Truth," $110.7 million; Fox's "Aliens in the Attic," $34.3 million; Universal's "Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant," $9.7 million; Fox's "(500) Days of Summer," $21.2 million; Wild Bunch Distribution's "Le petit Nicolas," $40.8 million (in France only); Fox's "Fantastic Mr. Fox," $11.1 million (over three U.K. frames); UGC's "Lucky Luke," $14.8 million over three France frames; and Fox's "Agora," $27.3 million over five frames in Spain only. "http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/con ... 6af40?pn=1
_________________The greatest thing on earth is to love and to be loved in return!
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Sun Nov 08, 2009 9:00 pm |
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Dr. Lecter
You must have big rats
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 4:28 pm Posts: 92093 Location: Bonn, Germany
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A Christmas Carol is looking at some longevity, so it's a fine opening. I think around $250-280 million worldwide is happening for it.
It's very good for Michael Jackson's This Is It, though. I se it making around $270 million worldwide with a small shot at $300 milion actually. Great success story.
Up is still doing pretty well and with Japan ahead $700+ million worldwide is almost guaranteed. That terrific UK performance is definitely helping it A LOT.
Public Enemies' good overseas performance really saved its face. It just passed $200 million WW and with Japan ahead it'll settle for around $220 million worldwide which is not great, but very solid considering the underwhelming domestic number.
Inglourious Basterds and The Final Destination both continue their amazing overseas performances. The latter wil soon hit $190 milion worldwide, while the former is aiming at a $200 million overseas gross and a $325 million worldwide total.
The Ugly Truth has almost passed $200 million worldwide now, should do so during the week. Overall, it's good for $210-215 million.
_________________The greatest thing on earth is to love and to be loved in return!
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Sun Nov 08, 2009 9:03 pm |
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Mr. R
Cream of the Crop
Joined: Mon Feb 20, 2006 3:19 pm Posts: 2231
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 Re:
Dr. Lecter wrote: It's very good for Michael Jackson's This Is It, though. I se it making around $270 million worldwide with a small shot at $300 milion actually. Great success story.. Are you f*ing kidding? They were expecting like 200 m in its first 5 f*ing days.
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 5:09 am |
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Dr. Lecter
You must have big rats
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 4:28 pm Posts: 92093 Location: Bonn, Germany
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 Re: Re:
Mr. R wrote: Dr. Lecter wrote: It's very good for Michael Jackson's This Is It, though. I se it making around $270 million worldwide with a small shot at $300 milion actually. Great success story.. Are you f*ing kidding? They were expecting like 200 m in its first 5 f*ing days. I expected $250 million. So? It did not live up to expecttations, yet it is financially a big success story.
_________________The greatest thing on earth is to love and to be loved in return!
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 8:05 am |
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xiayun
Extraordinary
Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 3:41 pm Posts: 25109 Location: San Mateo, CA
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It at over $185m worldwide!
Excellent hold by This Is It. It's not really a 58% drop since the $65m opening figure was for 5 days (it would've dropped 59% too if we use that metric domestically). The weekend-to-weekend drop is actually only around 30%, and it only had 11 additional markets, so the holds look very much on par with what happened in U.S.
_________________Recent watched movies: American Hustle - B+ Inside Llewyn Davis - B Before Midnight - A 12 Years a Slave - A- The Hunger Games: Catching Fire - A- My thoughts on box office
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 2:07 pm |
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Rev
Romosexual!
Joined: Tue Oct 19, 2004 3:06 am Posts: 32578 Location: the last free city
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It at over $185m worldwide!
Sony paid $60 million to release the film, right?
_________________ Is it 2028 yet?
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 2:25 pm |
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Kris K
Horror Hound
Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2004 1:44 pm Posts: 6228
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It at over $185m worldwide!
Yay for JENNIFER'S BODY.
Will do about $35M worldwide. On a $16M budget.
Must have done well in the UK.
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 2:29 pm |
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Mr. R
Cream of the Crop
Joined: Mon Feb 20, 2006 3:19 pm Posts: 2231
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 Re: Re:
Dr. Lecter wrote: I expected $250 million. So? It did not live up to expecttations, yet it is financially a big success story. Nobody gives a shit about what you've expected when it's 2 weeks after the release date, don't you think so? So it's kinda useless argument. Industry expectations were way higher the day before its opening day, I know that, you know that, everyone knows that. So don't try to put lipstick on a pig - it's still a pig. And financially it's definitely not a success story, at least not in theaters. 60 m paid for the rights + budget to make a film + at least 50 m for marketing, not to mention how many players are gonna share the pie.
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 3:06 pm |
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Corpse
Don't Dream It, Be It
Joined: Wed Aug 02, 2006 12:45 pm Posts: 37162 Location: The Graveyard
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It at over $185m worldwide!
This Is It is defnitely going to be a success for Sony. Should end up around 275/280m worldwide, and that's just the box office. The album is also a big hit, debuting at no.1 in many countries last week. And of course the DVD will be a success as well.
_________________Japan Box Office “Gods are great ... but the heart is greater. For it is from our hearts they come, and to our hearts they shall return.” “We were like gods at the dawning of the world, & our joy was so bright we could see nothing else but the other.” “There are three things all wise men fear: the sea in storm, a night with no moon, and the anger of a gentle man.” “You have to pretend you get an endgame. You have to carry on like you will; otherwise, you can't carry on at all.” "Paper is dead without words / Ink idle without a poem / All the world dead without stories."
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 3:42 pm |
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rsmyth96
Star Trek XI
Joined: Thu Jul 17, 2008 9:24 am Posts: 368
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It at over $185m worldwide!
Yeah, I saw that the album was doing really well. Since they extended the the theatrical run you have until tomorrow to see it. For fans this is the last chance to see the film with a theater experience.
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 6:51 pm |
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Barrabás
llegó a la casa vía marítima
Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2007 4:53 pm Posts: 6317 Location: la gran casa de la esquina
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It at over $185m worldwide!
Quote: A Christmas Carol is looking at some longevity, so it's a fine opening. I think around $250-280 million worldwide is happening for it. With a 200m budget, that would make it a bomb.
_________________ .
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 10:27 pm |
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Thegun
On autopilot for the summer
Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2004 10:14 pm Posts: 21856 Location: Walking around somewhere
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 Re: Re:
Mr. R wrote: Dr. Lecter wrote: I expected $250 million. So? It did not live up to expecttations, yet it is financially a big success story. Nobody gives a shit about what you've expected when it's 2 weeks after the release date, don't you think so? So it's kinda useless argument. Industry expectations were way higher the day before its opening day, I know that, you know that, everyone knows that. So don't try to put lipstick on a pig - it's still a pig. And financially it's definitely not a success story, at least not in theaters. 60 m paid for the rights + budget to make a film + at least 50 m for marketing, not to mention how many players are gonna share the pie. Its a huge hit, and industry expectations were never that high, only tracking for the final three weeks was. Close to 300 WW in theaters, at least another 200 WW in DVD sales, and probably at least a 50 million deal for TV rights. Considering Sony exclusively owns it, and not to mention the album to go with it, which has already sold over 1 million units WW, that will probably end up being another 50-100 million WW. It's budget and marketing was said to be less than what they paid for the rights it was mostly post production work. Most of the filming had already taken place. 600 low end WW on a 140 million investment at most = huge success, and thats year one alone
_________________ Chippy wrote: As always, fuck Thegun. Chippy wrote: I want to live vicariously through you, Thegun!
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Mon Nov 09, 2009 10:57 pm |
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Keyser Söze
Quality is a great business plan
Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2007 9:21 pm Posts: 6713
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 Re: Intl. Box-Office: This Is It at over $185m worldwide!
HR monday update 1) TII - $29.4M weekend/$129.1M total 2) Carol - $12.7M weekend 3) Up - 8.8M weekend/$368.2M total
Up went up 1.2M with OS actuals. I can see it make 390M by the time it opens in japan.
_________________ The world is all about mind and matter, I don't mind and U don't matter
I used to be shawman.
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Tue Nov 10, 2009 12:42 am |
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Mr. R
Cream of the Crop
Joined: Mon Feb 20, 2006 3:19 pm Posts: 2231
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 Re: Re:
Thegun wrote: Its a huge hit, and industry expectations were never that high, only tracking for the final three weeks was.
Close to 300 WW in theaters, at least another 200 WW in DVD sales, and probably at least a 50 million deal for TV rights. Considering Sony exclusively owns it, and not to mention the album to go with it, which has already sold over 1 million units WW, that will probably end up being another 50-100 million WW. It's budget and marketing was said to be less than what they paid for the rights it was mostly post production work. Most of the filming had already taken place.
600 low end WW on a 140 million investment at most = huge success, and thats year one alone It's not about the money. It's about sending a message. This is It was a major theatrical dissapointment and not that big of a success (before you throw in DVDs and CDs, etc - then again, when taking those, every movie is a success, but we can't live in a world like that, it doesn't live us space for imagination and argument, so we trash the movie that dissapointed in theaters - I thought that was the general rule). So no matter how much sugar you put in that pill, it's still bitter. And yeah, I don't give a damn about the rest, since the box-office is the public number we have here, and a comparison point for all other films. P.S. Thanks for explaining all that shit to me, as if I didn't know, playing with that for 8 years.
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Tue Nov 10, 2009 5:20 am |
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