Weekend Wrap-Up
By John Hamann
March 2, 2008
With very little for competition, Jumper manages to have a weekend where it doesn't drop more than 50% compared to the previous weekend. The sci-fi mistake earned $7.6 million in its third weekend, and was off 40% from the previous frame. The 16% fresh flick has now earned $66.8 million, but thanks to the Valentine's/President's Day weekend, should finish above $80 million.
Sixth spot goes to Step Up 2 the Streets, the Disney step dancing flick. Step Up 2 earned $5.7 million in its third weekend, and was off 41% from the previous frame. This has turned into a small hit for Disney, and the total has now reached $41.2 million against a production budget of about $35 million.
Seventh is Fool's Gold, the movie that won't go away. Fool's Gold earned $4.7 million and was off 28% from last weekend. The Kate Hudson flick has now earned $59.1 million, and with three new releases coming next weekend, we can only hope that the 10% fresh flick will be gone from theaters at that point.
Eighth spot goes to Penelope, the small fairy tale from upstart distributor Summit Releasing. Starring Christina Ricci as a young woman with a facial disfigurement, the Reese Witherspoon-produced flick earned $4.006 million this weekend from a very slim 1,196 venues. Penelope got buried by those Boleyn bitches in the marketing department, and didn't have a good chance this weekend. The good news is that this one cost only $15 million to make, and has already earned about $7 million overseas.
Best Picture winner No Country For Old Men finishes ninth this weekend after finishing 12th last weekend, as Miramax pushed the venue count up to 2,037 in honour of the win. No Country earned $4.005 million with the new venue count, lifting its audience from last weekend by 67%. No Country for Old Men is now the Coen Brothers biggest film ever at the domestic box office with a cume so far of $69.6 million.
Finishing tenth is Juno, as a lack of major Oscar gold has shoved Juno to the cheap seats. Juno took in another $3.4 million and was off 19% compared to last weekend. It sad to see the 11-week top ten stalwart approach the door, but it has earned $135.1 million against a budget of less than $10 million.
Overall, the box office is in pain. After a month of bad news, things are only going to get worse overall in the weekends to come, as last year had 300 open in the second weekend of March. The top ten last year brought in a huge $108 million, where this year, the total for the top 12 is an ugly $80.7 million. Next weekend we do get Roland Emmerich's 10,000 BC, which could do some business, but not the $70 million that 300 opened to at the same time last year.
1 |
Semi-Pro |
New Line Cinema |
$15,311,000 |
$15,075,114 |
New |
$15,075,114 |
2 |
Vantage Point |
Sony/Columbia |
$13,000,000 |
$12,819,245 |
- 44.0% |
$40,823,745 |
3 |
The Spiderwick Chronicles |
Paramount |
$8,752,000 |
$8,700,378 |
- 33.6% |
$55,028,942 |
4 |
The Other Boleyn Girl |
Sony/Columbia |
$8,300,000 |
$8,203,061 |
New |
$8,203,061 |
5 |
Jumper |
20th Century Fox |
$7,600,000 |
$7,568,462 |
- 40.4% |
$66,790,968 |
6 |
Step Up 2: The Streets |
Walt Disney |
N/A |
$5,742,479 |
N/A |
$48,621,711 |
7 |
Fool's Gold |
Warner Bros. |
$4,690,000 |
$4,418,229 |
- 32.6% |
$58,800,790 |
8 |
No Country for Old Men |
Paramount |
$4,005,000 |
$4,114,994 |
+ 71.1% |
$69,680,625 |
9 |
Penelope |
IFC Films |
$4,006,028 |
$3,802,144 |
New |
$3,802,144 |
10 |
Definitely, Maybe |
Universal |
N/A |
$3,382,005 |
N/A |
$26,650,585 |
11 |
Juno |
Fox Searchlight |
$3,350,000 |
$3,264,570 |
- 21.4% |
$135,049,108 |
12 |
Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins |
Universal |
$2,702,420 |
$2,646,570 |
- 36.4% |
$39,128,395 |
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Also Opening/Notables |
|
City of Men |
Miramax |
$122,000 |
$130,579 |
New |
$130,579 |
|
Chicago 10 |
Roadside Attractions |
N/A |
$42,724 |
New |
$42,724 |
Click here for all weekend data
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Box office data supplied by Exhibitor Relations
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