By Tim Briody
December 28, 2002
The Two Towers continues to speed ahead towards $200 million as it took in
another $15 million on Friday. Meanwhile, the holiday's only new wide
release, Catch Me If You Can, holds on strong when it counts.
This weekend falls smack in between Christmas and New Year's Day, arguably
the best box office time of the year. Not including The Two Towers, all
the remaining holdovers in the top ten will beat last weekend's take, or
have a minimal dropoff at the very worst. This is what makes the holiday
period remarkable; the high tide rises all boats.
The Two Towers
With a $15.05 million Friday, the second film in the Lord of the Rings
trilogy isn't leaving the top spot on the box office charts any time soon.
Continuing strong as we head into 2003, The Two Towers should end up with
$47 million for the weekend, off just 23.5% from its three-day total last
week. This puts it just under $200 million after the weekend, but it will
blow by that Monday, its 13th day of release. Fellowship of the Ring
didn't do it until day 19.
Astute readers may have noticed that The Two Towers took $15.8 million
Thursday, and is the only film in the top ten to depreciate from the day
after Christmas to Friday. Is this drop cause for any concern? Probably
not. First, we're talking $750,000, basically a drop in the bucket when
you see the big picture. Second, Christmas falling on a Wednesday and the
subsequent storm that day that crippled much of the east threw a big
monkey wrench into everything. We'll never know how it would have turned
out otherwise.
Catch Me If You Can
Was the Leonardo DiCaprio/Tom Hanks/Steven Spielberg triumvirate really
going to produce a bomb? Catch Me If You Can caught $10.1 million Friday
after earning nearly $19 million in its first two days. While there were
fears that it might fall off quickly after a hot Christmas Day start, this
clearly isn't another Ali. The entertaining caper will continue to bring
them in over the rest of the weekend, and a $32 million weekend gives the
film a nifty $50 million in five days.
As for the rest of the holdovers, the effect of the holiday season is in
full force. Two Weeks Notice is up 12.6% from last Friday. Maid In
Manhattan is up 32%. Gangs of New York helps its cause by gaining 23.6%.
The Wild Thornberries improve 63%. Want to know what someone means by
"December legs?" This weekend is textbook.
Check back tomorrow for David Mumpower's weekend wrapup.
Extrapolated Estimates for the Top Ten |
Projected Rank |
Film |
Estimated Gross (M$) |
1
|
Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
|
47.0
|
2
|
Catch Me If You Can
|
32.0
|
3
|
Two Weeks Notice
|
15.5
|
4
|
Maid In Manhattan
|
12.7
|
5
|
Gangs of New York
|
10.0
|
6
|
Drumline
|
8.5
|
7
|
The Wild Thornberrys
|
8.3
|
8
|
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
|
6.1
|
9
|
The Hot Chick
|
4.8
|
10
|
Die Another Day
|
4.5
|
Internal multiplier = A comparison of Friday's numbers to the rest of the
weekend. So if Catch Me If You Can makes $5.1 million
on Friday and $17.8 million for the whole weekend, then its internal
multiplier is 3.5 ($17.8 million / $5.1 million = 3.5).
Analysts use this number in reverse to predict weekend numbers from Friday's
numbers.
View other columns by Tim Briody