Dec
2011
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 Sitter with $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
It seems if you put men in armor and make a movie all shiny, people will rush out to see it.