Box Office Guru Wrapup: "Pirates" Captures $400M in Global Gold
Movie fans filled up multiplexes around the world giving "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" the largest global opening in box office history. In North America, the latest Johnny Depp adventure broke the record for the biggest Memorial Day weekend debut ever while still competing with fellow big-budget threequels "Shrek the Third" and "Spider-Man 3."
Ashley Judd's new horror film "Bug" was mostly ignored but Keri Russell's indie comedy "Waitress" made a splash expanding into national release and climbing all the way up to number five despite playing in just a fraction of the theaters of the other big holiday offerings. Overall, moviegoers spent nearly a quarter of a billion dollars on tickets for the top ten films over the long four-day weekend making it the highest-grossing Memorial Day frame ever.

Disney launched its assault on the summer box office with "At World's End" which easily topped the charts and grossed an estimated $142.1M over the Friday-to-Monday holiday frame and a total of $156.1M since its early opening on Thursday night with 8pm shows. The amount was similar to the $153.8M that its predecessor "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" collected in its first four days last July. That film did not have an early Thursday debut and was not over a holiday weekend, but faced less competition in the marketplace. "At World's End"'s four-day figure set a new record for the holiday easily beating the $122.9M of "X-Men: The Last Stand" from a year ago.

Over the Friday-to-Sunday period, the new "Pirates" tale took in $115.1M making it the fourth biggest opening weekend ever behind "Spider-Man 3," "Dead Man's Chest," and "Shrek the Third." "At World's End"'s journey began on Thursday with $14M from shows beginning at 8pm. Friday saw $43M in ticket sales starting from 12:01am showtimes, Saturday dipped 11% to $38.2M, Sunday eased another 11% to $33.8M, and Monday is estimated to drop by 20% to $27M. The new "Pirates" set sail in a record 4,362 theaters in North America and averaged $26,377 over three days, $32,566 over four days, and $35,776 overall including Thursday.

"At World's End" reunited the cast and crew of the first two films in the series including actors Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley, and Geoffrey Rush along with producer Jerry Bruckheimer and director Gore Verbinski. Critics were harsh on the new installment and especially thought it was too long at 2 hours and 47 minutes. The pic's B+ grade from over 19,000 users of Yahoo Movies suggests that fans are moderately satisfied with the latest Jack Sparrow tale.

Across the world, Disney claimed the all-time opening record with an estimated haul of $401M in ticket sales over six days from Wednesday through Monday. The first handful of countries bowed the effects-driven pic on Wednesday and by Saturday it was playing in 102 international territories where it looted an estimated $245M by the end of Monday. That was enough to break the old records set just three weeks ago by "Spider-Man 3" of $231M international and $382M global over its own six-day launch.

"Shrek the Third" fell sharply in its second weekend and claimed second place with a still-impressive $69.1M over the four-day weekend, according to estimates. The Friday-to-Sunday tally of $53M represented a disturbing 56% fall from its opening weekend. "Shrek 2," which also opened a week before the Memorial Day holiday frame, suffered a more manageable 33% drop over the three-day portion of its sophomore session. "Third" has not been as well-liked by moviegoers and faced tougher competition with "Pirates" launching. After 11 full days of release, the latest ogre tale has commanded $219.4M and seems on course to finish its North American journey in the neighborhood of $330M.

Swinging down to the number three position was the month's first threequel, "Spider-Man 3," with an estimated $18M over four days. The super hero saga's three-day portion dropped a troubling 52% but the cume after 25 days is now a towering $307.6M. The new Spidey crossed the $300M mark on Sunday after only 24 days and now sits at number 21 on the list of all-time domestic blockbusters after "Independence Day" which took in $306.2M in 1996, when ticket prices were much lower. A final North American haul of about $340M still seems likely. The latest webslinger sequel also pulled in $19.1M over the three-day weekend internationally to push the overseas gross to $499M. That puts the global gross at a stunning $806M and counting. By next weekend, the Venom pic will become the top-grossing "Spider-Man" film ever in terms of worldwide box office.

May's trio of hotly anticipated threequels has definitely generated lots of cash at the domestic box office with a combined cume to date of $683M. Corresponding totals for the top three May releases by Memorial Day over the past three years were $384M for last year, $394M for 2005, and $481M for 2004. However, moviegoers are not going crazy over any of them and seem to be left with lukewarm feelings which is hurting the long-term prospects. Many even feel that each is the worst installment in its own trilogy. Second weekend drops were mighty large for "Spider-Man 3" and "Shrek the Third" and "At World's End" might play out the same way. In fact, it's possible that none of the big threequels will reach the $350M mark domestically. If ticket buyers start feeling sequel fatigue this early with so many familiar characters and stories, it could pose a problem to the many summer sequels still on tap for the three months ahead. Films offering something new and fresh may just grab the attention of the public soon.

Lionsgate opened its new horror film "Bug" in fourth place but was met with a dismal $4.2M, according to estimates. The Ashley Judd starrer averaged a poor $2,529 from 1,661 sites over four days. Over the Friday-to-Sunday span, the R-rated chiller grossed $3.3M and averaged a dismal $1,993.

Fox Searchlight's indie sensation "Waitress" jumped into the top five this weekend as it expanded from 116 to 510 theaters across the country grossing an estimated $4M. The Keri Russell comedy averaged a solid $7,843 over four days and played as the alternative for adult audiences not interested in third helpings of bloated Hollywood franchises. With $6.5M after only its third weekend, "Waitress" could become a sleeper hit this summer and its high chart position will certainly help it nab more media attention this week. Over three days, the Sundance title grossed $3.1M and averaged $6,078.

The horror sequel "28 Weeks Later" ranked sixth with an estimated $3.3M over four days to push Fox's total to a decent $24.4M. "Disturbia" collected an estimated $2.4M in seventh place boosting its cume for Paramount to a sturdy $74.9M.

Universal's dramedy "Georgia Rule" followed with an estimated $2.4M giving the Jane Fonda-Lindsay Lohan pic a weak $16.8M to date. Moviegoers spent an estimated $1.6M on Anthony Hopkins and Ryan Gosling as their thriller "Fracture" spent its sixth weekend in the top ten for a $37.1M sum. Disney's comedy "Wild Hogs" jumped back into the top ten with an estimated $1.4M raising its stellar cume to $163.3M. Remaining holdover films earned less than $1M each over four days.

In the arthouses, Fox Searchlight's musical romance "Once" expanded and was still a potent player. The Irish film grossed an estimated $433,000 over four days from only 20 sites for a sturdy $21,626 average over the long weekend. Cume is now $537,000 and the distributor will widen this Friday into ten additional cities to roughly 60 playdates total.

Miramax saw strong results for the debut of its Italian film "Golden Door" which opened to an estimated $37,000 from a pair of houses. Averaging $18,500 per location, the immigrant tale expands further on Friday.

The top ten films grossed an estimated $247.8M over four days which was up 8% from last year when "X-Men: The Last Stand" opened at number one with a then-record $122.9M; and up 11% from 2005 when "Star Wars Episode III" remained on top with $70M.
Ashley Judd's new horror film "Bug" was mostly ignored but Keri Russell's indie comedy "Waitress" made a splash expanding into national release and climbing all the way up to number five despite playing in just a fraction of the theaters of the other big holiday offerings. Overall, moviegoers spent nearly a quarter of a billion dollars on tickets for the top ten films over the long four-day weekend making it the highest-grossing Memorial Day frame ever.

Disney launched its assault on the summer box office with "At World's End" which easily topped the charts and grossed an estimated $142.1M over the Friday-to-Monday holiday frame and a total of $156.1M since its early opening on Thursday night with 8pm shows. The amount was similar to the $153.8M that its predecessor "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" collected in its first four days last July. That film did not have an early Thursday debut and was not over a holiday weekend, but faced less competition in the marketplace. "At World's End"'s four-day figure set a new record for the holiday easily beating the $122.9M of "X-Men: The Last Stand" from a year ago.

Over the Friday-to-Sunday period, the new "Pirates" tale took in $115.1M making it the fourth biggest opening weekend ever behind "Spider-Man 3," "Dead Man's Chest," and "Shrek the Third." "At World's End"'s journey began on Thursday with $14M from shows beginning at 8pm. Friday saw $43M in ticket sales starting from 12:01am showtimes, Saturday dipped 11% to $38.2M, Sunday eased another 11% to $33.8M, and Monday is estimated to drop by 20% to $27M. The new "Pirates" set sail in a record 4,362 theaters in North America and averaged $26,377 over three days, $32,566 over four days, and $35,776 overall including Thursday.

"At World's End" reunited the cast and crew of the first two films in the series including actors Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley, and Geoffrey Rush along with producer Jerry Bruckheimer and director Gore Verbinski. Critics were harsh on the new installment and especially thought it was too long at 2 hours and 47 minutes. The pic's B+ grade from over 19,000 users of Yahoo Movies suggests that fans are moderately satisfied with the latest Jack Sparrow tale.

Across the world, Disney claimed the all-time opening record with an estimated haul of $401M in ticket sales over six days from Wednesday through Monday. The first handful of countries bowed the effects-driven pic on Wednesday and by Saturday it was playing in 102 international territories where it looted an estimated $245M by the end of Monday. That was enough to break the old records set just three weeks ago by "Spider-Man 3" of $231M international and $382M global over its own six-day launch.

"Shrek the Third" fell sharply in its second weekend and claimed second place with a still-impressive $69.1M over the four-day weekend, according to estimates. The Friday-to-Sunday tally of $53M represented a disturbing 56% fall from its opening weekend. "Shrek 2," which also opened a week before the Memorial Day holiday frame, suffered a more manageable 33% drop over the three-day portion of its sophomore session. "Third" has not been as well-liked by moviegoers and faced tougher competition with "Pirates" launching. After 11 full days of release, the latest ogre tale has commanded $219.4M and seems on course to finish its North American journey in the neighborhood of $330M.

Swinging down to the number three position was the month's first threequel, "Spider-Man 3," with an estimated $18M over four days. The super hero saga's three-day portion dropped a troubling 52% but the cume after 25 days is now a towering $307.6M. The new Spidey crossed the $300M mark on Sunday after only 24 days and now sits at number 21 on the list of all-time domestic blockbusters after "Independence Day" which took in $306.2M in 1996, when ticket prices were much lower. A final North American haul of about $340M still seems likely. The latest webslinger sequel also pulled in $19.1M over the three-day weekend internationally to push the overseas gross to $499M. That puts the global gross at a stunning $806M and counting. By next weekend, the Venom pic will become the top-grossing "Spider-Man" film ever in terms of worldwide box office.

May's trio of hotly anticipated threequels has definitely generated lots of cash at the domestic box office with a combined cume to date of $683M. Corresponding totals for the top three May releases by Memorial Day over the past three years were $384M for last year, $394M for 2005, and $481M for 2004. However, moviegoers are not going crazy over any of them and seem to be left with lukewarm feelings which is hurting the long-term prospects. Many even feel that each is the worst installment in its own trilogy. Second weekend drops were mighty large for "Spider-Man 3" and "Shrek the Third" and "At World's End" might play out the same way. In fact, it's possible that none of the big threequels will reach the $350M mark domestically. If ticket buyers start feeling sequel fatigue this early with so many familiar characters and stories, it could pose a problem to the many summer sequels still on tap for the three months ahead. Films offering something new and fresh may just grab the attention of the public soon.

Lionsgate opened its new horror film "Bug" in fourth place but was met with a dismal $4.2M, according to estimates. The Ashley Judd starrer averaged a poor $2,529 from 1,661 sites over four days. Over the Friday-to-Sunday span, the R-rated chiller grossed $3.3M and averaged a dismal $1,993.

Fox Searchlight's indie sensation "Waitress" jumped into the top five this weekend as it expanded from 116 to 510 theaters across the country grossing an estimated $4M. The Keri Russell comedy averaged a solid $7,843 over four days and played as the alternative for adult audiences not interested in third helpings of bloated Hollywood franchises. With $6.5M after only its third weekend, "Waitress" could become a sleeper hit this summer and its high chart position will certainly help it nab more media attention this week. Over three days, the Sundance title grossed $3.1M and averaged $6,078.

The horror sequel "28 Weeks Later" ranked sixth with an estimated $3.3M over four days to push Fox's total to a decent $24.4M. "Disturbia" collected an estimated $2.4M in seventh place boosting its cume for Paramount to a sturdy $74.9M.

Universal's dramedy "Georgia Rule" followed with an estimated $2.4M giving the Jane Fonda-Lindsay Lohan pic a weak $16.8M to date. Moviegoers spent an estimated $1.6M on Anthony Hopkins and Ryan Gosling as their thriller "Fracture" spent its sixth weekend in the top ten for a $37.1M sum. Disney's comedy "Wild Hogs" jumped back into the top ten with an estimated $1.4M raising its stellar cume to $163.3M. Remaining holdover films earned less than $1M each over four days.

In the arthouses, Fox Searchlight's musical romance "Once" expanded and was still a potent player. The Irish film grossed an estimated $433,000 over four days from only 20 sites for a sturdy $21,626 average over the long weekend. Cume is now $537,000 and the distributor will widen this Friday into ten additional cities to roughly 60 playdates total.

Miramax saw strong results for the debut of its Italian film "Golden Door" which opened to an estimated $37,000 from a pair of houses. Averaging $18,500 per location, the immigrant tale expands further on Friday.

The top ten films grossed an estimated $247.8M over four days which was up 8% from last year when "X-Men: The Last Stand" opened at number one with a then-record $122.9M; and up 11% from 2005 when "Star Wars Episode III" remained on top with $70M.
Related Items
| Movie: | Bug |
| Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End | |
| Waitress |
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on May 28 2007 03:20 PM Poor Spider-man, Boo Hoo! (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 03:48 PM In reply to this comment (#867071) Spider-Man still has the biggest weekend opening. At World's End had 4-days. Spider-Man had 3. If Disney hadn't gone with that ridiculous "thurdsay-night" bullshit then Spider-Man would have destroyed Pirates. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 04:02 PM Or you can just look at the fact that Spider Man 3 sucked and Pirates was at the very least decent. Money doesn't need to factor in at all. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 04:06 PM This kills me. $400 million in four days, yet it still will probably end up around $800 million away from Titanic's global record. Strange. Oh, and if I see another "the movie industry is suffering great losses, due to downloads" articles, I think I'm gonna puke. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 04:13 PM Who cares who made more? Honestly? Do you people have a stake in which movie makes more? Will it boost your ego knowing that your favorite movie kicked someone elses movie's a$$ in box office numbers? Seriously. Stop. ANYWAY!!!! I have yet to go see Pirates, i'll probably wait for the DVD. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 04:23 PM In reply to this comment (#867073) I keep trying to tell myself that (the money doesn't matter part, Spider-Man 3 was awesome), but it's just to exciting for me. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 04:39 PM Glad to see some love for Waitress. It's strange, I was so excited about the three threes that came out this month. Even though they were all decent, none of them were quite as enjoyable as Waitress. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 04:59 PM Man, whats with all the hate for Pirates & Spidey 3. I thought both were fun, entertaining summer blockbusters. Not sure what everyone was expecting, but I thoroughly enjoyed both. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:11 PM In reply to this comment (#867072) Think about what you're saying for a minute. That's like saying that the people who went to see the movie thursday night wouldn't have gone to see it period if it hadn't come out thursday night. If anything those people would have all gone to see it at midnight or friday meaning At World End would have made nearly as much on friday as Spiderman 3 did. And if Monday wasn't Memorial Day then most of the people who saw At World's End monday would have seen it earlier in the weekend giving Pirates that $156m in 3 days instead of 4. Disney knew what they were doing when they released it like that. Give it a month or so and we'll see if you still think Spiderman 3 is gonna make more money than At World's End. That's all I gotta say about that (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:21 PM In reply to this comment (#867074) I can explain this, well mostly. First of all the reason that no movie will probably ever break Titanic's record (at least not until movie tickets cost like $15 each) is because at the time Titanic was released there were only about 200 movies coming out each year compared to the now 500+ coming out each year. That means at the time there weren't as many options and it didn't have anything near the same competition. The biggest movie released during the year that Titanic was in theatres was Saving Private Ryan which made $216m. Titanic was a December release meaning it had both holidays and all of January and February (two of the worst months for movies) to make most of it's money. The only other reason that Titanic made so much was because at the time spending $200m on a movie was unheard of and it was based on one of the biggest most famous tragedies in history. If Titanic was released now and was the same quality movie with the same effects, it would probably make around half of what it did 10 years ago. It's all about the time. Hopefully it makes more sense now. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:22 PM In reply to this comment (#867079) You bring up a solid point. Good enough to get me to stop bitching about the thursday night stuff. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:24 PM Why does the shittier movie always make more money? ........must be those damn money thieving pirates! (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:26 PM In reply to this comment (#867078) Because everybody's a critic, didn't you know that? I guess nobody sent you the memo. I agree both movies were quality movies. People don't realize how much harder it gets to make a movie as the sequels go on and on. Personally I feel Pirates was a better movie seeing as I've already seen it 3 times but Spiderman 3 was still great. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:35 PM [b]Wow, a whole 19,000 users?[/b] "The pic's B+ grade from over 19,000 users of Yahoo Movies suggests that fans are moderately satisfied with the latest Jack Sparrow tale." Let's say that the avg. ticket price is in the range of 8-9 bucks. These 19,000 users roughly account for $160,000 of the $150 million or so made so far. This is around one tenth of 1 percent. Doesn't sound like a very convincing number to me. This isn't a slam on the movie itself, its chances in the overall scheme of things, or on the people that liked it or DIDN'T like it. I just think that its ridiculous that the writer would use this little factoid to back up the claim that despite poor reviews, the movie still did well. All you have to say is something like "Despite poor reviews, Pirates 3 made 1.8 Gazillion dollars". It sort of speaks for itself. Instead, Yahoo Movies gets a shameless plug. Maybe the writer lost a bet with one of the Yahoo guys or something... (Reply to this) |
![]() on May 28 2007 05:40 PM In reply to this comment (#867071) You mean poor Pirates. Not to mention that pirates opened on a holiday weekend with more theaters showing it (Reply to this) |
![]() on May 28 2007 05:43 PM In reply to this comment (#867073) Well spiderman 3 did not suck little loser nerd. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:49 PM "Films offering something new and fresh may just grab the attention of the public soon." Well, they better, because this sequel business is starting to get sickening. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:56 PM In reply to this comment (#867087) I can understand if they make sequels to some movies (mostly action movies), but why does Blair Witch 2 exist? They should just stop production on Wild Hogs 2. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 05:58 PM In reply to this comment (#867072) Spider-man 3 had zero competition for two weeks. (Reply to this) |
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on May 28 2007 06:00 PM In reply to this comment (#867089) Touche. (Reply to this) |
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