Showing posts with label Transformers: Dark of the Moon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transformers: Dark of the Moon. Show all posts

Box Office Actuals (7/8/11 - 7/10/11) - "Transformers" Keeps Competition At Bay...

Via Box Office Mojo, The Numbers, Deadline, and other sources:

"Transformers: Dark Of The Moon" retained its lockdown on the top spot of the North American Box Office totals, dipping 51.9% and grossing another $47.1 million. Overall, the third "Transformers" film is rolling along strong with a 12-day gross of $261.1 million thus far.

As impressive as that number is, the film is still lagging a distant second behind the pace set by 2009's "Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen", which had earned $293.4 million in that same stretch. 2007's "Transformers" film had banked $212.3 in its first 12 days.

Paramount executives are not only pleased with the fact that they have a massive hit on their hands domestically, but worldwide the film is delivering staggering totals. Overseas, "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon" has grossed $395 million and has tallied more than $662 million thus far. Within a week, the film will move past the first entry in the series, in terms of worldwide gross ($709 million), and the $836 million+ hauled in by "...Revenge of the Fallen" is well within reach. The only thing standing in "Transformers" way? A pesky little wizard named Harry Potter, who could potentially re-write some history books beginning this weekend.

In 2007, the first "Transformers" held the top spot for two weeks and narrowly was defeated in Week 3 by the Adam Sandler/Kevin James comedy, "I Now Pronounce You Chuck And Larry". In 2009, "...Revenge Of The Fallen" fell from the top after a two-week run when "Bruno" opened to the tune of $30.6 million for Sacha Baron Cohen.

Unlike the terrible 62% drop of "...Revenge of the Fallen", "...Dark Of The Moon"'s decline of slightly more than half of its opening audience was better than expected. Both films have held decent in their respective third weekends, but they have never faced the likes of a "Harry Potter" film. The "Harry Potter" series finale has the potential to surpass this year's biggest opening weekend of 2011 - the $97.8 million opening for "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon".

Can raunchy R-rated comedy continue to deliver big numbers? Can Kevin James overcome the worst reviews of his career? And which documentary had a massive opening weekend per-screen average? You might be surprised with the answers and the Top 40...after the cut!


HORRIBLE BOSSES

The sample set of 2011 Summer Movie Season R-rated comedies is now 4-strong as "Horrible Bosses" arrived on the heels of the bar-raising performances of "Bridesmaids", "The Hangover Part II", and "Bad Teacher". Critics were on board by a 3-to-1 margin, which translated to a much better than expected $28.3 million weekend.

"Horrible Bosses", featured Colin Farrell, Kevin Spacey, and Jennifer Aniston working against-type, with funnymen Jason Bateman, Jason Sudeikis, and Charlie Day playing the beleaguered employees flirting with the idea of offing their horrible bosses. "...Bosses" lagged behind "Bad Teacher"'s $31.6 million start, but eclipsed "Bridesmaids" and its $26.2 million opening. "The Hangover Part II", the now-second biggest grossing film of 2011, began with a sum of $85.9 million.

For all involved, the film's strong performance meant something different for each star. For Jason Bateman, the film served as the third-biggest ensemble comedy opening for him, falling behind "The Break Up" (2006, $39.2 million) and "Couples Retreat" (2009, $34.3 million), but ahead of "Starsky and Hutch" (2004, $28.1 million) and his co-starring role opposite Aniston, the rom-com "The Switch" (2010, $8.4 million).

For Colin Farrell, "...Bosses" was his largest opening in 8 years, forcing one to go all the way back to the ensemble cop actioner, "S.W.A.T." in 2003 ($37.1 million). Kevin Spacey hasn't opened a film this big since 2006's "Superman Returns" ($52.5 million), and "Horrible Bosses" served as the second biggest opening of any project in his entire career.

Elsewhere, "...Bosses" set a new high watermark for up and coming actors Sudeikis and Day, who have never opened a film this big and for Jennifer Aniston and Jamie Foxx, the film proved to be another consistent starter for the actors when compared to their ensemble work.

ZOOKEEPER

Kevin James delivered a frankly awful film as "Zookeeper" received a 14% Tomatometer with critics and a subpar $20.1 million start. Budgeted at $80 million, the Sony release was picked up from the bankruptcy-laden death of the MGM brand and Sony co-financed with MGM to keep the project afloat. Originally scheduled for an October 2010 release, the film was bumped into the summer of 2011, as Sony made a strong pitch to those who would listen that they had a success on their hands.

Watching the film, Kevin James seems lost and the screenplay pushes the boundaries of what is tolerable in a PG-rated film nowadays, both of kids and grown ups alike. Word-of-mouth was reportedly dismal and the film did not see an increase like other family films typically do on Saturday showings. People either tracked with the critical sentiment or they talked to their neighbors and friends because "Zookeeper" became less and less visited by Sunday evening.

Although it features an impressive list of voiceover talent, including co-producer Adam Sandler, Sylvester Stallone, Cher, Maya Rudolph, and Judd Apatow, the talking animals gag just didn't impress. For James, the opening was far below his other Sandler collaborations, and was nowhere near the $34 million start for 2009's "Paul Blart: Mall Cop".

A BETTER LIFE

Although Summit Entertainment may still struggle to determine the proper way to market a film (see everything not named "Twilight" or "RED" for an example), there should be some props given to the rollout strategy issued to the contemplative drama "A Better Life".

In its third weekend, the film expanded from 11 screens to 153 sites and saw receipts increase a whopping 237.9%. Audiences are becoming enamored with the film and the critics are largely in agreement, with the film netting 79% at Rotten Tomatoes. A marked departure for director Chris Weitz, "A Better Life" has grossed almost $600k thus far and Summit may look to expand the film into more and more cities. There should be no reason that Summit cannot turn this film profitable with its small-scale $10 million production budget. Actor Demian Bichir is also carrying some lingering Oscar buzz for his lead performance in the film.

MIDNIGHT IN PARIS

By the time you read this, Woody Allen's "Midnight In Paris" will have become, financially speaking, his biggest grossing film of all time. Finishing the weekend at $38.6 million, Allen may have dipped back outside the Top 10, but only saw attendance slide 26.4% in the film's 8th weekend. Sony Pictures Classics may soon turn to a reduction of theaters and switch plans over to a push for the DVD release, likely to coincide with an expected Oscar campaigns for Allen as director and writer, the film itself, and perhaps Owen Wilson, Corey Stoll, and Marion Cotillard in the acting categories.

With his resurgence clearly complete, Allen's next film, "Bop Decameron", places him back in front of the camera alongside Ellen Page, Jesse Eisenberg, Alec Baldwin, Penelope Cruz, Greta Gerwig, Roberto Benigni, and a host of others. The film is to be released in 2012.

BEATS, RHYMES & LIFE..

Heralded in critical circles, but often ignored when the history of rap music is analyzed and discussed, the groundbreaking and influential hip-hop group, A Tribe Called Quest, saw a documentary on their career and individual lives deliver a staggering per screen average of nearly $28k. Playing on 4 screens, the film rolled up $112k in its opening weekend, and raised some eyebrows at its success. Playing to nearly unanimous positive reviews, the film featured the directorial debut of actor Michael Rapaport, and was praised for digging into the conflicts and struggles the band endured, alongside their successes, for much of their existence.

THEY ADDED SCREENS BUT...

Audiences had more access but chose to avoid indie hits "The Tree Of Life", "Buck", and "Beginners" rather surprisingly. For "Beginners", the drop was rather confounding, as it added 47 more locations. However, the drop was a nominal 7.5% and the film has now earned back its production budget of $3.2 million stateside.

"Buck" surprisingly dipped nearly 20%s, as it played in a similar number of theaters. Overall, "Buck" has moved north of $1 million with a 4-week take of $1.7 million overall.

For Terrence Malick's "The Tree Of Life", the film stumbled 25.7% adding 9 screens to its overall availability. Domestically, "Tree..." has grossed $9.0 million, which may or may not be a disappointment for Fox Searchlight. They have played their reactions rather close to the vest all the way through the film's theatrical run. When adding in worldwide ticket sales, the film has earned $28.7 million, still short of its reported $32 million budget.

ADDITIONAL INDEPENDENT TRACKING

Oscar winning documentarian James Marsh's highly anticipated "Project Nim" failed to ignite much of the same attention and curiosity his Oscar winner, "Man On Wire" did in 2008. "Wire..." started on 2 screens with a $50k-plus opening weekend. Some were speculating that "...Nim" could pull a similar number but it fell far short of Marsh's previous success.

Distributed by Roadside Attractions, the film takes a look at a still-controversial 1970s experiment where scientists attempted to take a chimpanzee and raise him like a human being. Critics loved the film, but audiences in New York and Chicago were resistant. Grossing $6,455 per screen, "...Nim" opened with just $26k in its opening frame.

REMAINING TOP 12 FILMS

Even with "Horrible Bosses" exceeding expectations, "Bad Teacher" had a nice third weekend hold, sliding just 38.8%. Total gross stands at $78.7 million and the film could pull a gross north of $100 million by the time its run concludes.

"Super 8" kept a nice run going losing just 38.9% of its previous weekend attendees. The film has earned a solid $118.1 million in 5 weeks.

"Larry Crowne" saw the largest slide of the weekend, shedding 54.7% of its opening weekend audience. The film will earn its $30 million production budget back but "...Crowne" is easily one of the big disappointments of the 2011 summer movie season.

THE DISCOUNT HOUSE

"Thor" moved to the second-run houses and saw ticket receipts climb 43.2%. The $178.7 million hit arrives on home video September 13, 2011.

THE WEEKEND BREAKDOWN

#1 Film - "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon", earned $47.1 million in its second weekend. Cumulative total sits at $261.1 million.

Last Year's #1 Film at this time: "Despicable Me", earned $56.4 million in its debut weekend.

Biggest Per Screen Average: "Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels Of A Tribe Called Quest", $27,996 at 4 locations ($112k weekend)

Worst Per Screen Average (50+ Sites): "Judy Moody And The NOT Bummer Summer", $475 at 171 locations ($81k, $14.1 million cumulative)

Largest Increase (50+ Sites): "A Better Life", +237.9%

Steepest Decline (50+ Sites): "Larry Crowne", -54.7%

Films Earning More Than $1m for the weekend: 15

Films Which Surpassed $100m: N/A

Films Which Surpassed $200m: "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon"

Films Which Surpassed Reported Budget This Weekend (Domestic): "Mr. Popper's Penguins", "Beginners"

The Top 40 and other notables (Wkd Figures and % Chg, based on 4-day totals)!

TW

LW

DAY

FILM

WKD

TOTAL

% CHG

1

1

12

Transformers: Dark Of The Moon

$47.1m

$261.1m

-51.9

2

N

3

Horrible Bosses

$28.3m

$28.3m

New

3

N

3

Zookeeper

$20.1m

$20.1m

New

4

2

17

Cars 2

$15.2m

$148.8m

-42.1

5

3

17

Bad Teacher

$8.9m

$78.7m

-38.5

6

4

10

Larry Crowne

$5.9m

$26.2m

-54.7

7

5

31

Super 8

$4.8m

$118.1m

-38.9

8

6

10

Monte Carlo

$3.8m

$16.1m

-49.0

9

8

24

Mr. Popper's Penguins

$3.2m

$58.1m

-43.0

10

7

24

Green Lantern

$3.1m

$109.7m

-52.0

11

10

52

Midnight In Paris

$2.634m

$38.6m

-26.4

12

9

59

Bridesmaids

$2.628m

$158.1m

-27.9

13

11

38

X-Men: First Class

$1.5m

$142.1m

-50.1

14

12

46

The Hangover Part II

$1.2m

$250.8m

-49.9

15

13

52

Pirates: On Stranger Tides

$1.1m

$236.3m

-51.9

16

14

46

Kung Fu Panda 2

$865k

$159.0m

-48.0

17

15

45

The Tree Of Life

$794k

$9.0m

-25.7

18

20

66

Thor

$573k

$178.7m

+43.2

19

16

38

Beginners

$553k

$3.3m

-7.5

20

19

87

Rio

$413k

$141.3m

-7.5

21

18

24

Buck

$386k

$1.7m

-19.7

22

17

10

Delhi Belly

$375k

$1.2m

-35.5

23

32

17

A Better Life

$330k

$560k

+237.9

24

21

73

Fast Five

$261k

$208.8m

-21.3

25

22

94

Born To Be Wild IMAX

$237k

$8.7m

+5.9

26

24

94

Soul Surfer

$131k

$43.7m

-19.9

27

23

80

Water For Elephants

$125k

$58.3m

-27.2

28

27

17

Page One: A Year Inside The N.Y. Times

$116k

$430k

-6.7

29

N

3

Beats, Rhymes & Life...Travels Of A Tribe Called Quest

$112k

$112k

New

30

28

479

Hubble 3D

$106k

$26.5m

-6.5

31

25

24

The Trip

$104k

$951k

-35.1

32

29

80

...Madea's Big Happy Family

$99k

$53.2m

-11.9

33

30

73

Cave Of Forgotten Dreams

$82k

$4.8m

-25.4

34

26

31

Judy Moody/NOT Bummer Summer

$81k

$14.1m

-40.0

35

40

101

Insidious

$79k

$53.7m

+70.0

36

31

66

Something Borrowed

$66k

$38.8m

-34.2

37

38

409

Sea Rex 3D: Journey To A Prehistoric World

$64k

$3.5m

+25.7

38

34

115

The Lincoln Lawyer

$62k

$57.9m

-30.2

39

36

10

Terri

$45k

$145k

-31.3

40

43

17

Turtle: The Incredible Journey

$39k

$184k

-3.3

BUBBLING UNDER INCREASES AND OPENINGS:

43. “Bride Flight”, $31k, $279k total, +24.0%

45. "Project Nim", $26k, NEW

47. "Sholem Aleichem: Laughing In The Darkness", $20k, NEW

55. “Win Win”, $14k, $10.2m total, +26.2%

57. “Rejoice And Shout!”, $12k, $72k total, +72.1%

Box Office Actuals (7/1/11 - 7/4/11) - "Transformers" Demolishes Everything In Its Path...

Via Box Office Mojo, The Numbers, Deadline, and other sources:

"Transformers: Dark Of The Moon" decimated the Independence Day weekend box office records, delivering a massive $115.9 million 4-day weekend, which raised it's 6-day cumulative gross to an impressive $180.7 million in domestic figures. Even more impressive is the worldwide haul of the third film in Michael Bay's extraordinarily successful "Transformers" franchise, with figures climbing up to $418 million thus far.

As thrilled as Paramount is with those figures, this third "Transformers" is tracking rather significantly behind the sequel "...Revenge Of The Fallen", which had grossed more than $214 domestic in its first 6 days. When factoring in the initial film in the series in 2007, Michael Bay's "Transformers" films have grossed just under $2 billion worldwide. That figure will be passed imminently.

With most entities aggregating 4-day weekend totals, the 3-day figures on a typical Friday-Sunday analysis would still provide "Transformers" with the largest 3-day Independence Day opening ever. Banking $97.9 million over those three days eclipsed 2004's "Spider-Man 2" and its $88.2 million start. Incidentally, the original "Transformers" ranks third on the list with its $70.5 beginning in 2007.

As analysts dug through the numbers, opinions were largely in line with the theory that this was a staggering opening for the film on many fronts. Although reviews were better here than with the dismal second offering, critics weren't exactly standing up for the film either (36% via Rotten Tomatoes), but Bay has always succeeded despite, or in spite of, what the critics say about his work. And clearly, "Transformers" is bullet-proof entertainment.

In addition to the Independence Day 3-day and 4-day weekend records, "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon" scored the largest opening for IMAX exhibitions globally, amassing more than $22 million from those ticket receipts. Michael Bay's begging fans to see it in 3-D, also paid off with 60% of its ticket sales coming from that presentation. Recent 3-D offerings (Cars 2, Pirates...On Stranger Tides) were bringing in approximately 40% of its opening numbers from 3-D showings.

With CinemaScore showing audiences ranking the film with a solid "A", "Transformers" has one more guaranteed huge weekend coming before the long-awaited and much anticipated finale to the biggest grossing film franchise of all time, "Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows - Part II" comes to a close on July 15.

Paramount also made mention that with "Super 8" moving north of $100 million in receipts, they are the only studio who can boast of five consecutive $100 million grossing films (Transformers, Super 8, Thor, Kung Fu Panda 2, and Rango).

Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts fail to make the grade, Bollywood makes a splash, and a Disney superstar struggles to open a movie once again. All of this and the Top 40 after the cut!



LARRY CROWNE

Sigh. Maybe it was the poorly received trailer or the dwindling prospects of two dynamic Academy-Award winning iconic actors, but the Tom Hanks/Julia Roberts romantic comedy, "Larry Crowne" was a big disappointment for Universal over the weekend. Positioned as counterprogramming to the unbeatable "Transformers" film, Universal had initially projected grosses in the mid $20 million range for the 4-day weekend. Audiences, like critics, failed to make a connection with the film and the film ran out of steam, grossing just $16.1 million for the weekend.

Audiences under 35 rated the film "C+" with CinemaScore and Hanks and Roberts endured some of the lowest critical marks of their career with Rotten Tomatoes levying a mere 35% approval on the film. For Hanks, "Larry Crowne"'s $13.0 million 3-day start bested 2007's "Charlie Wilson's War" (also with Roberts) $9.7 million start and was slightly better than his 2004 Coen Brothers collaboration, "The Ladykillers", which began with a $12.6 million take.

The film's opening matched some of Julia Roberts' recent output as well. Although her last film, "Eat Pray Love" opened much bigger than this effort ($23.2 million), "Larry Crowne" tracked with her 2009 action-comedy "Duplicity" with Clive Owen ($14.0 million starting weekend). Everyone expected more from the film it turns out - critics, audiences, and studio. Unless the film draws an unexpected second weekend, "Larry Crowne" may come to rest at approximately $40 million domestic.

MONTE CARLO

As she continues to push herself away from the Disney machine, the A-list teen star Selena Gomez saw another frustrating opening for a movie career still in its relative infancy. Starring alongside Leighton Meester and Katie Cassidy, Gomez's "Monte Carlo" began its run with a mediocre $8.6 million 4-day weekend. Budgeted for a modest $20 million, the film will likely turn a small profit and end up on pace with Gomez's 2010 summer offering, "Ramona And Beezus", which finished with approximately $26 million theatrically.

Some have scoffed at Gomez's first two forays into establishing a movie career, believing that with her high profile on Disney Channel, increasingly successful pop/Top 40 music career, and front-page relationship with pop superstar Justin Bieber, she should be a bigger draw. Time will certainly tell, but Gomez will next hit the multiplex with a cameo in the highly anticipated "The Muppets" this fall.

"DELHI BELLY" AND BOLLYWOOD

Often ignored by most analysts is the fact that with North American box office figures being reported, Canada and the United States factor into the domestic totals gathered by the studios. Although, Bollywood films do receive openings in the States, they are a bit higher profile in Canada and when the numbers come in, Bollywood often draw surprising numbers. Often, the films numbers come in during the middle of the week and are left out of the Top 40 rankings found in this column or on the main box office tracking websites.

UTV Communications, however, got their receipts counted in time for the rankings and reported a strong opening for the curiously-titled "Delhi Belly", which opened with $702k on just 88 screens. The comedy/crime caper about three Dubai roommates who are stuck dealing with a mysterious package earned just under $8,000 per screen and delivered a second strong Bollywood film opening in as many weeks. Last week, playing on 54 screens, the comedy/crime film "Double Dhamaal" opened with comparable numbers.

"Dhamaal" is the latest offering from Reliance Big Pictures, who tout the biggest grossing domestic Bollywood release of all time, 2009's "3 Idiots", which earned $6.5 million in its theatrical stint. Even with a significant expected dropoff, "Delhi Belly" could finish near $1 million when all tickets are counted.

BUCK

Audiences continue to seek out and praise "Buck", the mild-mannered documentary about a man who has devoted his life to training, teaching, and learning about the ways in which horses and humans communicate. Rolling out to 131 screens, "Buck" saw its numbers jump +106.3% and raise its overall totals to $1.1 million. In a year of critically acclaimed documentaries, "Buck" has the makings of being one of the more significant successes for that genre for 2011.

BEGINNERS

Also rolling along nicely is "Beginners", building on Christopher Plummer's Best Supporting Actor buzz and climbing 57.2% this weekend. The small-scale release from Focus Features is still rather hard to find on just 108 screens, but is nearly profitable in terms of earning back its production budget of $3.2 million. It will be interesting to see what steps Focus makes to expand this further, as calculated rollouts for "Midnight In Paris" and to a lesser extent, "The Tree Of Life" have been quite successful this year. "Beginners" could seemingly benefit handsomely from the same treatment.

ADDITIONAL INDEPENDENT TRACKING

"Page One: A Year Inside The New York Times" expanded to 38 sites and saw business ramp up an impressive 243.2%.

Chris Weitz's melancholy drama "A Better Life" drew on some big-name critics' acclaim and saw business increase 94.9%, despite appearing on just 11 locations. The 11-day total for the film is now resting at $204k.

John C. Reilly's return to independent fare, "Terri", a dark comedy about a misfit high school teenager and Reilly as his guidance counselor, had one of the larger per screen averages of the weekend, gathering $13,043 per site to a 65-site tally of $78k.

REMAINING TOP 12 FILMS

The light has burned out on "Green Lantern". The film hemorrhaged another 56%, and while it did eclipse $100 million in box office receipts, the film is still a massive disappointment with its $200 million production budget looming large and unattainable.

Pixar saw "Cars 2" suffer the biggest second weekend drop off in studio history (-52.2%) and will struggle to earn back its $200 million budget stateside. Globally, however, the film became profitable this weekend with a worldwide haul of $204.8 million, so the news is not all terrible for the disappointingly received film.

"Midnight In Paris" saw its fortunes return with an uptick of 5% and return inside the Top 10. "...Paris" is now just $6 million away from becoming Woody Allen's biggest grossing film of all time. Elsewhere, "Bridesmaids" and "Super 8" held strong over the 4-day weekend.

Despite seeing its theaters slashed from 2,500 sites to just over 2,000, "Bridesmaids" lost only one-quarter of its previous weekend's audience and is closing in on $150 million in box office earnings. "Pirates Of The Caribbean" also dropped a quarter of its previous weekend's audience; rather surprising for a film that has been dropping steadily since its opening weekend.

THE DISCOUNT HOUSE

"Tyler Perry's Madea's Big Happy Family" blew the doors off the 2nd-run houses with a unspeakable 604.2% increase from moving into 140 locations. The film has grossed $53.0 million in its 11 week run and arrives on DVD/Blu-Ray and VOD on August 30, 2011.

THE WEEKEND BREAKDOWN (4-Day Weekend Totals)

#1 Film - "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon", earned $115.9 million in its debut 4-day weekend. Cumulative total sits at $180.7 million.

Last Year's #1 Film at this time: "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse", earned $83.6 million in its debut 4-day weekend.

Biggest Per Screen Average: "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon", $28,878 at 4,013 locations ($115.9 million 4-day weekend)

Worst Per Screen Average (50+ Sites): "Hoodwinked Too! Hood Vs. Evil", $531 at 68 locations ($36k, $10.1 million cumulative)

Largest Increase (50+ Sites): "Tyler Perry's Madea's Big, Happy Family", +604.2%

Steepest Decline (50+ Sites): "Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer", -73.3%

Films Earning More Than $1m for the weekend: 15

Films Which Surpassed $100m: "Transformers: Dark Of The Moon", "Cars 2", "Super 8", "Green Lantern"

Films Which Surpassed $200m: N/A

Films Which Surpassed Reported Budget This Weekend (Domestic): "Midnight In Paris"

The Top 40 and other notables (Wkd Figures and % Chg, based on 4-day totals)!

TW

LW

DAY

FILM

WKD

TOTAL

% CHG

1

N

6

Transformers: Dark Of The Moon

$115.9m

$180.7m

New

2

1

11

Cars 2

$31.6m

$122.6m

-52.2

3

2

11

Bad Teacher

$17.3m

$62.7m

-45.4

4

N

4

Larry Crowne

$16.1m

$16.1m

New

5

4

25

Super 8

$9.5m

$110.1m

-20.8

6

N

4

Monte Carlo

$8.6m

$8.6m

New

7

3

18

Green Lantern

$7.9m

$103.6m

-56.0

8

5

18

Mr. Popper's Penguins

$6.7m

$51.7m

-33.9

9

11

46

Midnight In Paris

$4.382m

$34.6m

+5.1

10

8

53

Bridesmaids

$4.355m

$153.7m

-17.2

11

6

32

X-Men: First Class

$3.6m

$139.3m

-45.8

12

7

40

The Hangover Part II

$2.8m

$248.7m

-49.8

13

9

46

Pirates..Stranger Tides

$2.6m

$234.2m

-46.7

14

10

40

Kung Fu Panda 2

$2.1m

$157.3m

-50.0

15

12

39

The Tree Of Life

$1.3m

$7.8m

-1.6

16

17

32

Beginners

$741k

$2.5m

+57.2

17

N

4

Delhi Belly

$702k

$702k

New

18

19

18

Buck

$601k

$1.1m

+106.3

19

14

81

Rio

$543k

$140.6m

+1.9

20

15

60

Thor

$471k

$178.0m

-7.9

21

16

67

Fast Five

$391k

$208.4m

-23.1

22

22

88

Born To Be Wild IMAX

$278k

$8.3m

+23.2

23

20

74

Water For Elephants

$207k

$58.1m

-19.2

24

23

88

Soul Surfer

$202k

$43.4m

-3.1

25

25

25

The Trip

$198k

$802k

+27.4

26

13

18

Judy Moody...NOT Bummer Summer

$165k

$14.0m

-73.3

27

43

18

Page One: Inside The New York Times

$155k

$269k

+243.2

28

30

473

Hubble 3D

$145k

$26.3m

+30.5

29

55

74

Tyler Perry's Madea's Big, Happy Family

$137k

$53.0m

+604.2

30

26

67

Cave Of Forgotten Dreams

$136k

$4.7m

-4.5

31

38

11

A Better Life

$121k

$205k

+94.9

32

21

60

Something Borrowed

$120k

$38.7m

-46.8

33

29

123

Rango

$110k

$123.2m

-5.5

34

27

109

The Lincoln Lawyer

$110k

$57.8m

-20.2

35

18

11

Double Dhamaal

$99k

$491k

-67.2

36

N

3

Terri

$78k

$78k

New

37

36

95

Source Code

$72k

$54.6m

+4.5

38

34

74

Incendies

$62k

$1.8m

-11.9

39

33

95

Insidious

$54k

$53.6m

-25.2

40

32

11

Conan O'Brien Can't Stop

$49k

$191k

-49.3

BUBBLING UNDER INCREASES AND OPENINGS:

41. “Trollhunter”, $48k, $112k total, +138.4%

46. "The Names Of Love", $36k, $80k total, +17.3%

52. "Queen To Play", $29k, $379k total, +295.7%

54. “Passione”, $22k, $55k total, +45.7%

56. “13 Assassins”, $20k, $746k total, +8.8%