View Full Version : Update: Final 4-Day Weekend Results - "Fifty Shades of Grey" Debuts at $93M


JamesG
02-15-2015, 08:19 PM
Weekend Report: Grey Makes Green over Valentine's Day Weekend
by Ray Subers
February 15, 2015


The highly-anticipated big-screen adaptation of Fifty Shades of Grey scored one of the biggest R-rated debuts ever this weekend, while Kingsman: The Secret Service was strong in second place.

Fifty Shades was even more impressive at the international box office, where it opened to a stunning $158 million. The domestic box office Top 12 earned an estimated $196 million, which makes this the biggest weekend ever in February.







Playing at 3,646 theaters — the widest opening ever for an R-rated movie — Fifty Shades of Grey scored an estimated $81.7 million over the three-day weekend.

That ranks second all-time in the month of February behind The Passion of the Christ; among R-rated movies, it ranks fifth behind The Matrix Reloaded, American Sniper, The Hangover Part II and The Passion.

Fifty Shades also opened noticeably higher than the first Twilight movie, which took in $69.6 million in its first weekend back in 2008. Adjusting for ticket price inflation, it looks like the two movies had roughly the same initial attendance.



The movie's impressive debut doesn't come as a total surprise: as Universal readily pointed out in recent advertisements, the book upon which its based has sold over 100 million copies worldwide, which makes this a true literary phenomenon.

Still, there was always a risk that those who read the book in private wouldn't be as willing to watch the movie's more explicit scenes in public.



Universal's marketing campaign addressed that issue by focusing on the romance over the sadomasochism, while also subtly suggesting there was more to see (if, of course, you bought a ticket).

That strategy was more or less effective, though there's reason to believe a significant number of older book readers stayed away; specifically, Universal's exit polling indicated that 42 percent of the audience was under 25 years of age, which seems a bit high.



The success of Fifty Shades of Grey can also be attributed to a very smart scheduling decision. Originally, the movie was set to open in August 2014, but the start of production was delayed to the point where that date was no longer feasible.

Instead of picking another fairly arbitrary date, Universal staked a claim to Valentine's Day. That move seems to have paid off, as the movie set a new Valentine's Day record with a massive $36.7 million (over 50 percent higher than the previous record).

A chunk of that surely came from date night crowds; in general, men represented 32 percent of the Fifty Shades audience, which has to be significantly higher than the male share of book readers.



It's worth keeping in mind, of course, that the movie will almost certainly drop off quickly from here. Female-skewing literary adaptations tend to be fairly front-loaded — the Twilight sequels being the most radical version of this — as do romances that open over Valentine's Day weekend.

Add in the fact that it's receiving mixed word-of-mouth ("C+" CinemaScore), and it's hard to see how Fifty Shades of Grey reaches $200 million.

A good comparison is Valentine's Day, which did 51 percent of its total business on this same weekend in 2010. If Fifty Shades performs similarly, it will ends its run with around $160 million.







Kingsman: The Secret Service was arguably more impressive than Fifty Shades of Grey this weekend.

Playing at 3,204 locations, the comic book adaptation opened to an estimated $35.6 million, which is in the same ballpark as recent action movies Taken 3 ($39.2 million) and The Equalizer ($34.1 million).

For the four-day weekend, it will likely wind up over $40 million, which trounces past President's Day titles like The Wolfman, Constantine, Jumper, and A Good Day to Die Hard.



Fox's decision to schedule Kingsman against Fifty Shades of Grey raised some eyebrows: was it really possible for this R-rated action movie to make money against the Valentine's Day juggernaut that is Fifty Shades?

In hindsight, this seems like a particularly savvy move: by providing such a stark contrast, the movie wound up being the de facto counter choice over the holiday weekend.



Of course, scheduling alone won't do the trick — the movie also needs to seem like it delivers the goods, which Kingsman seemed to do. The movie looked like a lot of fun, and had a wave of strong buzz thanks to Fox's aggressive pre-screening program.

The movie also benefited from the fact that it fit equally in to two genres that are near their peak right now: comic book adaptations and spy movies. In particularly, Kingsman got a lot of mileage out of the critic quote "More Badass Than Bond," which is surely helped by the fact that 007 is coming off his most-successful outing in decades.



Kingsman received a "B+" CinemaScore, which aligns nicely with its 71 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

The movie should hold decently in the coming weeks, and has a solid chance of ultimately reaching $100 million.







After a surprisingly strong debut last weekend, The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water fell 45 percent to an estimated $30.5 million this weekend.

That's a fairly steep drop for a movie like this; in comparison, The LEGO Movie was off 28 percent on the same weekend last year. Still, the movie is poised to pass $100 million on Monday, and should ultimately reach $150 million before the end of its run.







American Sniper eased 29 percent to $16.4 million, which ranks eighth all-time among fifth weekends.

On Sunday, it passed $300 million, and remains on track to ultimately become the highest-grossing movie from 2014 with over $340 million.







Jupiter Ascending rounded out the Top Five with an estimated $9.4 million, which is off 49 percent from last weekend. The big-budget sci-fi flick has so far earned $32.6 million, and still has an off-chance of ultimately reaching $50 million.

Meanwhile, Seventh Son dropped 43 percent to $4.15 million, which brings its total to a meager $13.4 million.







After nearly a month in limited release, Still Alice expanded to 502 locations and earned an estimated $1.71 million. To date, the movie has grossed $4.63 million; with Julianne Moore pegged as a sure thing to win the Best Actress Oscar next Sunday,

Still Alice should continue to hold well in the weeks to come.







Old Fashioned, a Christian romance that was positioned as Fifty Shades counter-programming, earned an estimated $1.1 million at 224 locations.

That seems to be the biggest weekend ever for a faith-based movie playing at fewer than 300 theaters, and should be considered a decent result for distributor Freestyle Releasing.







What We Do in the Shadows opened to an excellent $65,800 at two locations, which translates to a $32,900 per-theater average.

The movie played on a single screen at each location, and nearly all its shows were sell outs. The well-reviewed vampire comedy will expand to the top 25 markets by the end of the month.







Musical The Last 5 Years earned an estimated $45,100 through three locations this weekend.

It was also available on video-on-demand, though those numbers aren't currently available.

http://www.boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=4024&p=.htm









February 13-15, 2015 Weekend Studio Estimates:


1. Fifty Shades of Grey $81,670,000
2. Kingsman: The Secret Service $35,600,000
3. The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water $30,540,000 / $93,673,000
4. American Sniper $16,435,000 / $304,133,000
5. Jupiter Ascending $9,430,000 / $32,551,000
6. Seventh Son $4,153,000 / $13,423,000
7. Paddington $4,150,000 / $62,343,000
8. The Imitation Game $3,525,000 / $79,657,000
9. The Wedding Ringer $3,400,000 / $59,743,000
10. Project Almanac $2,730,000 / $19,560,000

JamesG
02-17-2015, 06:43 PM
Fifty Shades at $85M Beats The Passion of the Christ’s Opening February Record – Monday Update
by Anthony D'Alessandro
February 16, 2015


Studio actuals are being reported tomorrow, but in Monday morning estimates Universal Focus’ Fifty Shades of Grey with $85M has eclipsed The Passion of the Christ‘s record February FSS of $83.8M.

In addition, Fifty Shades stands as the third-highest weekend bow for Universal ever behind 2013’s Fast & Furious 6‘s $97.4M and 2011’s Fast Five $86.2M.

http://deadline.com/2015/02/fifty-shades-of-grey-kingsman-weekend-box-office-1201372952/

JamesG
02-18-2015, 02:37 AM
Fifty Shades Hits $93M over Four-Days; Final B.O. Actuals – Tuesday Update
by Anthony D'Alessandro
February 17, 2015


Rentrak has reported box office actuals for Presidents Day weekend of February 13-16 with Universal Focus Features’ Fifty Shades of Grey coming in a hair higher with a 3-day of $85.17M, and a slightly lower four-day of $93M.

Among R-rated 3-day openings, Fifty Shades owns the fourth best of all-time, with 2003’s Matrix Reloaded still tops with $91.77M, and as mentioned previously, the feature adaptation of E.L. James bestselling novel is the top opening ever for a February release.



20th Century Fox’s Kingsman: Secret Service maintains its $36.2M three-day, but is slightly below its 4-day prediction yesterday with an actual of $41.76M.

Final total tickets sales to date for 2015 for the period of January 1-February 16 is $1.489B, +10% over the same frame in 2014.



Total four-day domestic weekend tally: $246.16M, still an all-time record for the holiday, that +18% over the same four-day frame a year ago.

http://deadline.com/2015/02/fifty-shades-of-grey-kingsman-weekend-box-office-1201372952/