Box Office Review: Avatar Just Won't Quit!
So where is this going to end?
Final figures released Monday show Avatar actually broke $50 million over the weekend. The movie's overall domestic take stands at $430.8 million. And counting. And counting. And…
The world's No. 2 movie of all-time as of last week, the James Cameron epic used the weekend to pass Spider-Man and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest on the domestic list, and set itself up to rise to No. 3 in those rankings perhaps as soon as next weekend. (Bye, Star Wars, E.T. and friends…)
So, no, Leap Year never really had a chance. Titanic, however, does.
Even at the fantastic rate Avatar is raking in the bucks overseas—it's worldwide haul stands at about $1.3 billion now—the film is still a long $500 million away from matching the No. 1 movie of No. 1 movies (also made by Cameron, natch).
Titanic's all-time domestic mark may be even safer than its worldwide one.
Avatar's $429 overall stateside gross puts it $171 million away from Titanic's domestic record of $600 million. And while that may not seem like much to a 3-D-powered monster, consider that even The Dark Knight got tired after breaking $500 million.
Of course, getting tired is something that Avatar, like Titanic before it, seems incapable of. In its first three weekends, ticket sales basically held even; this weekend, business was only off 30 percent. All this, and Oscar nominations aren't even out yet.
Elsewhere this weekend:
• Daybreakers did nothing to dispell the whole vampires-are-hot theme. The $21 million movie debuted in fourth with a solid $15 million.
• Sherlock Holmes (second place, $16.6 million) continued to do its weird thing of topping Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel (third place, $16.3 million) in the weekend standings, but not in overall gross. Domestically, Squeakquel's at $178.2 million; Sherlock's at $165.2 million.
• It's Complicated (fifth place, $11 million; $76.4 million overall) is the Avatar of middle-aged-women movies—just hanging in there, weekend after weekend.
• Amy Adams' Leap Year (sixth place, $9.2 million) was no Bride Wars.
• Even considering a budget of only $18 million, Michael Cera's Youth in Revolt (ninth place, $7 million) didn't blow the roof off the place.
Here's a rundown of all of the weekend's top-grossing films, per estimates compiled by Exhibitor Relations:
Avatar, $48.5 million ($50 million Final figures)
Sherlock Holmes, $16.6 million
Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, $16.3 million
Daybreakers, $15 million
It's Complicated, $11 million
Leap Year, $9.2 million
The Blind Side, $7.8 million
Up in the Air, $7.1 million
Youth in Revolt, $7 million
The Princess and the Frog, $4.7 million
Final figures released Monday show Avatar actually broke $50 million over the weekend. The movie's overall domestic take stands at $430.8 million. And counting. And counting. And…
The world's No. 2 movie of all-time as of last week, the James Cameron epic used the weekend to pass Spider-Man and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest on the domestic list, and set itself up to rise to No. 3 in those rankings perhaps as soon as next weekend. (Bye, Star Wars, E.T. and friends…)
So, no, Leap Year never really had a chance. Titanic, however, does.
Even at the fantastic rate Avatar is raking in the bucks overseas—it's worldwide haul stands at about $1.3 billion now—the film is still a long $500 million away from matching the No. 1 movie of No. 1 movies (also made by Cameron, natch).
Titanic's all-time domestic mark may be even safer than its worldwide one.
Avatar's $429 overall stateside gross puts it $171 million away from Titanic's domestic record of $600 million. And while that may not seem like much to a 3-D-powered monster, consider that even The Dark Knight got tired after breaking $500 million.
Of course, getting tired is something that Avatar, like Titanic before it, seems incapable of. In its first three weekends, ticket sales basically held even; this weekend, business was only off 30 percent. All this, and Oscar nominations aren't even out yet.
Elsewhere this weekend:
• Daybreakers did nothing to dispell the whole vampires-are-hot theme. The $21 million movie debuted in fourth with a solid $15 million.
• Sherlock Holmes (second place, $16.6 million) continued to do its weird thing of topping Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel (third place, $16.3 million) in the weekend standings, but not in overall gross. Domestically, Squeakquel's at $178.2 million; Sherlock's at $165.2 million.
• It's Complicated (fifth place, $11 million; $76.4 million overall) is the Avatar of middle-aged-women movies—just hanging in there, weekend after weekend.
• Amy Adams' Leap Year (sixth place, $9.2 million) was no Bride Wars.
• Even considering a budget of only $18 million, Michael Cera's Youth in Revolt (ninth place, $7 million) didn't blow the roof off the place.
Here's a rundown of all of the weekend's top-grossing films, per estimates compiled by Exhibitor Relations:
Avatar, $48.5 million ($50 million Final figures)
Sherlock Holmes, $16.6 million
Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, $16.3 million
Daybreakers, $15 million
It's Complicated, $11 million
Leap Year, $9.2 million
The Blind Side, $7.8 million
Up in the Air, $7.1 million
Youth in Revolt, $7 million
The Princess and the Frog, $4.7 million
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