Its five-and-a-half-day tally was the fourth biggest opening for the extended Independence Day holiday frame trailing 2004's Spider-Man 2 ($180.1M in six days), last year's Transformers ($155.4M in six-and-a-half days), and 2005's War of the Worlds ($112.7M in six days). Since the holiday falls on a different day each year prompting studios to bow their films in various ways, comparisons are not always fair. But in all three cases, the extended openings accounted for 48-49% of the eventual final domestic gross.
Smith once again proved that he's Hollywood's most bankable box office draw. Hancock was the actor's eighth consecutive number one opener, eighth consecutive film to break the $100M mark, and gave the actor his seventh consecutive year of having a film reach the nine-digit mark. Co-starring Jason Bateman and Charlize Theron, Hancock offers up a new take on the superhero story with a central character that drinks, curses, and roughs up children. The PG-13 film cost a reported $150M and Smith served as producer as well as star. Reviews were overwhelmingly negative but audiences came out anyway generating sales that were far from a record, but still very healthy nonetheless. Bad buzz could make the weeks ahead rocky though.
Hancock's journey began on Tuesday night with $6.8M, Wednesday's official opening day delivered $17.4M, and Thursday added in $17.1M more. The Fourth of July holiday fell on a Friday this year and saw Hancock take in $18.8M. Saturday climbed 39% to $26.1M while Sunday was estimated to dip by 19% to $21.2M. Sony launched the tentpole pic around the world this weekend and hauled in an additional $78M overseas bringing the global opening to a stellar $185.3M over the past week.
Following its top spot debut last week, Disney/Pixar's animated hit WALL•E fell 47% to second with an estimated $33.4M giving the G-rated toon a sturdy $128.1M in ten days. It was a larger than usual decline for a Pixar pic but the Fourth of July holiday falling on a Friday contributed to the slide. The robot adventure opened 34% higher than last summer's Ratatouille which debuted at the same time, but after ten days the lead was cut in half to 17%. Both periods include the Independence Day holiday.
But thanks to strong midweek sales at a time when kids are out of school, WALL•E's ten-day cume is 10% ahead of Cars and 9% ahead of Kung Fu Panda. Both of those animated hits opened in early June. The road ahead will not be an easy one as two more PG-rated family films open this Friday - the Brendan Fraser adventure film Journey to the Center of the Earth and the Eddie Murphy comedy Meet Dave. At its current pace, WALL•E could find its way to $235-245M domestically.
Universal's effects-driven actioner Wanted fell a steep 60% in its second weekend to an estimated $20.6M and boosted its ten-day total to $90.8M. The $75M Angelina Jolie assassin pic should find its way to $130-140M from North America making it the second biggest R-rated film of the year after Sex and the City. Overseas, Wanted grossed an estimated $18.8M from 23 markets pushing the international total to $64.2M and the global gross to $155M so far.
Steve Carell's Get Smart landed in fourth in its third frame with an estimated $11.1M. Off 45%, the Warner Bros.release has collected $98.1M in 17 days. Paramount's animated hit Kung Fu Panda followed in fifth with an estimated $7.5M, off 36%, lifting the total to $193.4M. Currently the third largest film of 2008, the DreamWorks production looks to end up with about $220M and could have its toon crown swiped by WALL•E later this summer.
Universal's comic reboot The Incredible Hulk fell 48% to an estimated $5M and brought its sum to $124.9M which was almost identical to the $124.7M that 2003's Hulk took in at the same point in its run. The new pic opened lower but has enjoyed somewhat better legs. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull followed with an estimated $3.9M, down only 24%, for a new cume of $306.6M. That puts the Steven Spielberg sequel at number 26 on the list of all-time domestic blockbusters ahead of the $306.2M of 1996's Independence Day. Of course, ticket prices were much higher a dozen years ago when Will Smith scored his first of five number one openers over this holiday and its tally today would be roughly $490M.
Abigail Breslin landed in eighth place with her Depression-era pic Kit Kittredge: An American Girl which disappointed in wide release grossing only $3.6M, according to estimates, in its first weekend of national play. Expanding from five to 1,843 locations, the G-rated pic aimed at young girls averaged a poor $1,954 per theater. Given the popularity of the books and toys that the film is based on and the sizzling numbers posted in limited release, a much stronger turnout was expected. Total sits at just $6.1M for Picturehouse.
Comedies rounded out the top ten with Sex and the City grossing an estimated $2.3M and You Don't Mess With the Zohan taking in an estimated $2M. Totals stand at $144.9M and $94.8M, respectively.
Two critically-panned films fell from the top ten this weekend. The Mike Myers comedy The Love Guru tumbled 68% to an estimated $1.7M for a weak cume of $29.3M. Budgeted at $60M, the Paramount release should finish with only $31-33M. Fox's M. Night Shyamalan thriller The Happening declined by 63% to an estimated $1.5M for a $62.1M total. Produced for about $55M, the R-rated pic should end up with around $65M which is a nice bounce back after the director's Lady in the Water which grossed $42.3M in 2006. But The Happening stills ranks as the second lowest performer for Shyamalan since he became a household name in 1999 with The Sixth Sense.
The top ten films grossed an estimated $155.5M which was off 3% from last year when Transformers opened in the top spot with $70.5M over three days; but up 12% from 2006's holiday frame when Superman Returns debuted at number one with $52.5M.
Author: Gitesh Pandya,
www.BoxOfficeGuru.com
Related Items
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on Jul 06 2008 08:25 PM it was disappointing to see Wall-E witness such a big drop. I was anticipating more like Ratatouille's second frame of around 38%, specially since the word-of-mouth has been amazing. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 08:37 PM Big Willie Did it agian. and hancock also made a HUUUUGGGEEEEE 78.3 million OS. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 09:03 PM "Of course, ticket prices were much higher a dozen years ago when Will Smith scored his first of five number one openers over this holiday and its tally today would be roughly $490M." --- I think you mean that they were lower :) (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 09:08 PM Hancock wasn't that bad and I am SERIOUSLY crushing, 4th-grader style, on Charlize Theron right now. I really don't know what to make of the Hulk's gross. I really liked it but I simply don't know if this is counted a success or a failure. I suspect something like 'minor-league success' would be appropriate. (Reply to this) |
![]() on Jul 06 2008 09:14 PM I was dissapointed with Hancock, the last 30 minutes killed it... Sad to see Wanted have a huge drop, since its doing great though not just here in America I am sure we will get a sequal which is fine by me. Cant wait for HB II next week, I am really worried about how its gonna perform especially considering TDK comes out a week later (halle-loo-ya!). Next week HB II- 35 Million total 95 Million (hopefully more though) Journey to center- 22 Mil total- 65 Million Meet Dave- 12 Million Total- 35 Million (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 09:45 PM Hancock was thoroughly disappointing, what the heck happened... It's sad that Pixar's films are steadily decreasing (a lil) in their range of profitability though the studio has maintained a great record of quality in its films (excepts Cars, not so good). I hope it's not an indication of the primary k-6 kid demographic being increasingly distracted by the glut of the superficial and the existence of sub-par animation by other studios.. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 10:00 PM Never mess with a black man's ****...HanCOCK butchered the competition. Big Willie did it again :) (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 10:07 PM Never mess with a black man's C O C K...HanCOCK butchered the competition. Big Willie did it again :) (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 10:48 PM Hancock was awesome. Everyone I know loved it, and the whole theater was laughing and cheering. I don't know what the hell is wrong with critics. **** drama, sometimes we just want a good movie, and Hancock delivered. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 11:30 PM hancock was pretty good.....that is all (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 06 2008 11:35 PM In reply to this comment (#1846086) TombstoneLawDog; You and I are totally on the same page: I thought Hancock was a lot of fun, and I was pleasantly surprised at the serious turn it took. Also, jeeeez, Charlize Theron looked smokin' fuc.kin' HOT in that black outfit! Why can't she play Supergirl, if they ever decide to do a JLA movie RIGHT? Also, I think the memory of Ang Lee's Hulk is still messing with the new (and infinitely superior) movie's mojo. In addition to that problem, I think that while Marvel's intentions to redeem this particular franchise was in the right place, the studio's estimations of how popular the character would be in a big screen translation were overestimated. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 01:46 AM thereign: Infinitely superior in your opinion. In my opinion the new Hulk was awful. I got absolutely nothing out of it. I think the studio knew it was not going to make money but released it to act as a set-up for other Marvel universe films. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 02:03 AM With the exception of Wall.E, not one of these other movies is inspired or any better than mediocore at best. And yet most of them are grossing over $100 million in less than a month! And you wonder why the studios keep putting out garbage? What a dumbed-down, brain washed culture we have become. I am sick and tired of going to the movies and being disappointed time and time again. Seriously, how many of these movies are you going to buy on DVD and watch over and over in the years to come? Seems like every year I buy fewer and fewer new movies on DVD. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 03:06 AM I hope Hellboy 2 makes good money and then Dark Knight steam rolls everything to become the highest grossing movies of 2008!! WHY SO SERIOUS!? (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 05:10 AM balanceman, you need to stop making so many trips to the beach this Summer. I mean, you have clearly come down with a case of too much sand in your vagina. As for Hancock, it was okay, I guess. The only real problem with it is that the last third of it pulled a 180 & pretty much went straight into "WTF" territory. Glad to see it made a decent amount of cash, though. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 05:39 AM Wanted- great flick. WAY better than i expected. its Matrix meets Office Space. hilarious and kick2ss action. probably the best bet in terms of pure entertainment on whats out right now. although predictable(saw the twists before they happened)...it says alot when i know whats going to happen and it STILL entertains me... WallE- borderline sh3t. boring and in place of dialogue...there's amateurish predictability with the mediocre mime antics of a SUPPOSEDLY special robot that says one stinkin' word. over...rated. an adult nerdy artfest trapped in a kid's movie. hopefully Journey will destroy it soon. hulk-if you saw the first one...you saw this one. add a better villian...and you have the same movie as the first. too much Banner, not enough Hulk Kung Fu Panda - best kid's movie out right now...pretty funny as well Get Smart- funniest movie out. hopefully second funniest flick(Forgetting...Marshall is too early for me to call a summer movie) behind Pineapple Express hancock- better than i expected but seriously, did Lucas of Boll have a role in this? i've never been blah-ed by Theron's acting, but was when i saw it. same with Smith. thank god Bateman was entertaining or else it coulda been a snoozer. bad casting...or else Smith should have played a character closer to his MIB smart2ss fast talkin' persona. his role in this one was just as snoozerific as I am Legend. seemed like he mailed it in...same with Theron The Dark Knight-stop showing me trailers!! bring on the frikkin movie... (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 05:49 AM RIP Mike Myers. All of your characters seem exactly the same but with different outfits. (Reply to this) |
![]() on Jul 07 2008 06:30 AM I Liked Hancock. It was way better than the critics in my area were making it out to be. Good fun, Smith made the character work. Wanted was 'been there done that' for me. Good action that was very Matrix-esque, but less inspiring. The whole loom/fate/greek mythology connection is interesting, but overall the movie didn't hold my interest. I'll have to check out the comic it's based off of. I've got a feeling it will be more interesting than the movie was for me. The new Hulk was great. Pretty much encompassed what I wanted from a Hulk movie. Plenty of good Hulk smash action mixed in with Banner trying to cure himself. Wall-E was good quality Pixar entertainment that I always enjoy (except for Cars wasn't so great). The point made about less movies coming out every year that a person would want to own is a good one. My opinion falls into this category as well. Plenty of entertaining movies are coming out, but they're almost always watch once quality, not movies I'd own and watch multiple times. I've got hope for HB II and TDK though, but we'll see. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 07:12 AM how can people be arguing that this has been even a decent summer for movies so far? barring some excellent documentaries, there's been 'iron man' and 'wall-e' (which was good, not great) AND THAT IS IT. i even broke down and saw 'wanted' the other day because all you tools told me it was legit and it sucked. it was completely corny and any comparisons to 'the matrix' (made here and by critics) are totally unjustified. 'the matrix' was smart, stylish and innovative. there was not one new effect or stunt in 'wanted' that felt fresh or unique, and what few tricks they had (like shooting another flying bullet out of mid air) they used like 5 times! the movie was completely hollow and i'm not even accepting it as escapist fair where u can turn your brain off, because half the time i was actively thinking about how useless it was. example: a cool shot like where the guy jumps through the window to create the glass mosaic thing around his face was completely undercut but the CHEESY sped-up motion and flying office papers as the guy "ran" down the hallway. sorry, but that's just too much euro-camp for me. it was a graphic novel, not a cartoon. and macavoy at the end: "what the hell have you done lately." that just pissed me off. you throw me an unsubstantiated piece of trash that's only supposed to be enjoyed at face value and then criticize me for trying (though failing) to temporarily escape reality with it? it's like the director thought he was better than his own movie and was pandering down to the audience with the product. screw that, go rip off korn's 'freak on a leash' music video a little more with that bullet-retracing crap. so add this to the list of crappy summer movies that people on this site endorse (indy 4, hulk, zohan, get smart and now hancock? please.) you guys need to evaluate these movies a little more objectively. just because we're served up cinematic turds all summer doesn't mean that the least crappy of those offerings is actually good. it just seems so in relative terms. balanceman knows whats up. hollywood is phoning it in again and laughing all the way to the bank because people would rather see a big-budget movie that they assume will dazzle them with CGI than they would seek out a highly-rated doc or independent movie. in case anyone does care, the following are all excellent "alternatives" to the latest tinseltown excrement: 'mongol' - classic-feeling historical epic with clear, detailed battle sequences. 'bigger, stronger, faster*' - debut doc from chris bell is remarkably even-handed as he deals with steroid use in america and his own family. 'encounters at the end of the world' - werner herzog rarely disappoints and this doc is daring, humorous and laden with amazing visuals. ok, so i addressed some of the problems and offered solutions. and what if you don't get indie flicks out your way? get netflix for the price you'd pay to see that lackluster blockbuster and stop the vicious cycle. (Reply to this) |
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on Jul 07 2008 07:43 AM balanceman & Dahluzz, go get a room, work out your frustration together while you watch 'Mongol' and then go find some small, deserving political campaign to save. Seriously. GET OVER IT. There is nothing less interesting or useful than people getting on a movie website and, because of whatever their personal beef is, pissing on everyone else who likes different movies than they do. --Oh, wait--There IS something less interesting: Coming onto a movie website with a THEORY about WHY people like different movies, relating to their obvious character deficiencies. (Reply to this) |
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