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Freakshow
Moderator
Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,129
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Weekend Report: One Direction Rocks, Instructions Surprises Over Labor Day
by Ray Subers September 1, 2013 Over a busier-than-expected Labor Day weekend, 3D concert flick One Direction: This is Us took first place at the box office ahead of Lee Daniels' The Butler. The big story, though, is the incredible performance of Spanish-language family comedy Instructions Not Included, which wound up in fifth place despite playing in fewer than 400 theaters. While it was down year-to-year, overall business still came in at a solid level this weekend (the top 12 earned an estimated $92.8 million). The riches were spread across a ton of titles: over the three-day weekend, 24 different movies grossed over $1 million. Playing at 2,735 theaters, One Direction: This is Us opened in first place with an estimated $17 million. That's not quite on par with the concert movies featuring Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber and Michael Jackson, all of which started with over $23 million. Still, it's noticeably ahead of concert movie flops from Katy Perry and the Jonas Brothers, and is a good figure for an inexpensive movie with a targeted (cheap) marketing campaign. Sony geared that marketing effort directly at the British boy band's rabid young female fanbase, and they're the ones who accounted for most of the ticket sales: the audience was 87 percent female and 65 percent under the age of 17. They gave the movie a strong "A" CinemaScore, though that's not necessarily indicative of the movie's long-term prospects. A more relevant statistic is its 54.4 percent fall from Friday to Saturday, which is the steepest drop ever outside of December. In second place, The Butler continued its excellent run by adding an estimated $14.7 million. To date, the historical drama has earned $74 million, and it now appears on pace to finish above $100 million. Comedy hit We're the Millers earned $12.6 million this weekend for a new total of $109.6 million. This makes it the sixth Jennifer Aniston movie to take in over $100 million at the domestic box office. Planes took fourth place this weekend with an estimated $7.8 million. To date, the Cars spin-off has banked $70.8 million. Opening at just 347 theaters, Instructions Not Included took fifth place with an incredible $7.5 million this weekend. That's significantly higher than other Spanish-language movies from Lionsgate's Pantelion division—Girl in Progress and No Eres Tu, Soy Yo earned just $2.6 million and $1.34 million, respectively, in their entire runs. Instructions star Eugenio Derbez also appeared in those movies, which makes Instructions's huge debut even more remarkable by comparison. Not only do Hispanics represent a growing percentage of the U.S. population, but they also account for a disproportionately high amount of movie theater ticket sales. According to the Motion Picture Association of America's 2012 theatrical market report, Hispanics made up 17 percent of the population, but 26 percent of frequent moviegoers. In spite of this, there are very few movies made each year that are specifically targeted towards Hispanics. Simply reaching out to Hispanics isn't enough, though, as proven by the low grosses of Girl in Progress and No Eres Tu, Soy Yo. It's also important that the story resonates, and Instructions Not Included's focus on family seems to have clicked with the audience. The movie received a rare "A+" CinemaScore, which suggests that it could play well in the long-term. With great word-of-mouth and an incredible per-theater average, it wouldn't be surprising at all if Lionsgate attempts to expand this in to nationwide release next weekend. Meanwhile, the weekend's other new openers bombed hard. Getaway opened in ninth place with just $4.5 million, which is on par with Dark Castle Entertainment's Bullet to the Head. The movie never looked particularly good, had a light marketing effort, and received awful reviews, so this debut is about in line with expectations. It received an awful "C+" CinemaScore, and should disappear from theaters quickly. Playing at 870 theaters, Closed Circuit earned just $2.54 million over the three-day weekend. Including its Wednesday/Thursday grosses, the movie has so far grossed $3.06 million. Even taking in to account the light release, this debut is noticeably worse than that of past Focus Features Labor Day movies like The Constant Gardener, The American and The Debt. After a week in limited release, The Grandmaster expanded to 749 theaters and earned $2.45 million this weekend. As part of a double-bill with Star Trek Into Darkness, World War Z finally passed $200 million at the domestic box office this weekend. Meanwhile, Pacific Rim inched past $100 million. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=3721&p=.htm August 30-September 1, 2013 Weekend Studio Estimates: 1. One Direction: This is Us $17,000,000 2. Lee Daniels' The Butler $14,742,000 / $74,007,000 3. We're the Millers $12,610,000 / $109,565,000 4. Planes $7,756,000 / $70,844,000 5. Instructions Not Included $7,500,000 6. Elysium $6,300,000 / $78,404,000 7. The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones $5,200,000 / $22,654,000 8. The World's End $4,759,000 / $16,568,000 9. Getaway $4,505,000 10. Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters $4,425,000 / $54,965,000 |
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#2 |
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Member
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Feb 12, 2007
Location: chattanooga.tn
Posts: 5,139
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I enjoy the get away i don't under stand why people go t o the theater and watch concerts? i think it just wasted of money
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