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If you want some data to support the notion that January has been a historical box office graveyard for new releases, here they are. In 2000, the average January wide release opened to $9.3 million with a final domestic take of $27.0 million. The "largest" opener was Next Friday, which debuted to $16.9 million. It was also the most successful in terms of final box office take with $57.2 million. 2001 saw gradual improvement to an average debut of $12.9 million with a final domestic take of $42.9 million. Of course, over 70% of the box office for the new January openers that month came from two titles, The Wedding Planner and Save the Last Dance. The latter film was the most successful January release of the 2000s up until, well, 2009. In 2002, the average January opening was $11.1 million with a final domestic take of $39.3 million. 2003 had slightly better openers at a rate of $13.7 million per debut, but the final domestic box office was only marginally better at $41.1 million. Only one January film made at least $60 million in each of these years. In 2002, it was Snow Dogs, an allegedly uplifting Disney release that starred the box office corpse of Cuba Gooding Jr. , who used to be famous, as hard as that is to believe now. The big release of January of 2003 was Kangaroo Jack, a CGI movie about a rappin' kangaroo that was endless mocked on this site for the body of five years. If you missed it, you're one of the lucky ones.
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