As weekends go, this one definitely did not set the box office ablaze, and when the the final numbers come in, it may rate as the worst since 2008. All told, the top 12 films brought in an anemic $69.7 million.
First up was the new ensemble romantic comedy New Year’s Eve that took the top spot at the box office with a paltry $13.7 million, a whopping 75% less than the similarly themed Valentine’s Day from last February. This was well below even the lowest expectations for the film, and perhaps it will sustain itself through the holiday it’s named for, but this opening certainly isn’t going to leave to many executives happy this morning.
Coming in second was the Jonah Hill comedy The Sitterwith $10 million. This is the first comedy with Hill in the lead, and it’s pretty obvious that the film going audience wasn’t that thrilled with the concept. I’d say color me surprised, but I’m not.
Twilight: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 fell to third this week with $7.9 million, bringing its domestic take to $259.5 million off of a $110 million budget. Worldwide it has broken $633.5 million. It may be annoying to see one book broken into two parts, but between this and the final two Harry Potter films, it seems that the concept sadly works.
Coming in fourth was The Muppets with just a breath of $7 million which brings its domestic total to $65.8 million. With a $45 million dollar budget this film has yet to break even and looks unlikely to do so, sadly.
Rounding out the top five was Arthur Christmas with $6.6 million.
Due next week is Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows and a limited release of Mission:Impossible – Ghost Protocol.
Apparently nothing can stop the freight train that is the Twilight series.
Twilight: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 took the top spot at the box office for a third weekend in a row with $16.9 million, bringing its domestic total to $247.3 million off of a $110 million dollar budget. Add in its international take and the film has brought in $588.3 million. It looks like splitting the fourth and final book into two movies was the right idea.
Coming in second was The Muppets with a hefty 61.7% drop from their opening weekend. They brought in $11.2 million, but that was somewhat expected with their opening having been a holiday weekend.
Third place went to the Martin Scorsese children’s book adaptation, Hugo. It went into a wider release this weekend which kept its decline down to 32.9% to bring in $7.6 million. This brings its domestic total to $25.1 million with no word yet on what the budget was or how it’s doing internationally. Considering the advertising push I saw for it in England, I’m thinking this may be a film more targeted at the international audience.
Arthur Christmas, may be another film with more of an international play behind it. You couldn’t escape the promotional push on this film over there, and seeing as it’s doing better on the international front, I can see why. It came in fourth this weekend on the domestic front with $7.3 million.
Coming in fifth was Happy Feet Two which may be shaping up to be one of the biggest disappointments of the year. It brought in $6 million this weekend bringing its domestic total to $51.7 million. Seeing as the original did over $41 million its opening weekend, you can see things are not going well here.
The big releases for next weekend are the star-studded New Year’s Eve and the comedy The Sitter. The latter looks especially painful and formulaic.
The first part of the final Twilight film easily won the box office this weekend, surprising no one.
Twilight: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 raked in $139.5 million this weekend, falling short of the second film’s (New Moon) $142.7 million, but still an impressive hall none the less. There really isn’t much else to say except … one more film to go and then we can forget this garbage series. (yeah, I said it)
Coming in second was the animated Happy Feet Two with a somewhat disappointing $22 million compared to the original’s $41.5 million opening weekend.
Immortals fell a worrisome 62.5% from its opening weekend, bringing in only $12.25 million. This brings its 10 day domestic total to $53 million off of a $98 million budget.
Landing in fourth was Jack & Jill with a 52% drop to $12 million, and shows a definite weakening in the former gold standard of Adam Sandler films. Perhaps the audience has finally realized what Sandler himself has said that he just plays the same character over and over?
Puss in Boots rounded out the top five with $10.7 million, bringing its total to a pretty disappointing $122 million.
This week’s big releases include Arthur Christmas, The Muppets and Hugo, so it’s all family driven productions as we head into the Thanksgiving weekend.
On a side note, I will be in England next week on vacation, but I do still plan to bring you the weekly box office report because, well, it fascinated me week after week.