Box Office: What Recession? Biggest President’s Day Weekend In Hollywood History
By Steve Mason/Feb. 13, 2009 11:51 pm EST
TOP GROSSING PRESIDENT’S WEEKENDS FOR HOLLYWOOD
- combined gross of top 12 films -
2009 – $195M (estimated)
2007 – $167.8M
2008 – $141.1M
2003 – $141M
2005 – $137.1M
Director Marcus Nispel (2003’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake) and the Platinum Dunes production company have gotten the all-new Friday the Thirteenth off to a spectacular $20M opening day. That could translate to a well-above-expectations $51.25M by Tuesday morning. The new Jason restart quickly follows the Platinum Dunes success of The Unborn, released on January 9 to a $19.8M 3-day take. That David D. Goyer written and directed genre pic was made for just $16M, and The Unborn has generated an estimated $42M in the US.
Friday the Thirteenth will finish the 4-day as either the #1 or #2 best grossing President’s Day weekend title as it tries to chase down 2007’s Ghost Rider.
ALL-TIME 4-DAY PRESIDENT’S DAY OPENINGS
Ghost Rider – $52M opening
Friday the Thirteenth – $51.25M opening (projected)
50 First Dates – $45.1M opening
Daredevil – $45M opening
Constantine – $33.6M opening
Jumper – $32.1M opening
Bridge to Terabithia – $28.5M opening
Eight Below – $25M opening
The Spiderwick Chronicles – $24.7M opening
John Q – $23.6M opening
Platinum Dunes, headed by Tranformers director Michael Bay, has now added the successful Friday the Thirteenth franchise to its string of low budget horror pics, which includes the remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre ($28M opening – $80.5M cume), the remake of The Amityville Horror ($23.5M opening – $65.2M cume), Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning ($18.5M opening – $39.5M cume), the remake of The Hitcher ($7.8M opening – $16.4M cume) and the aforementioned The Unborn. The new Crystal Lake saga is, of course, heavily front-loaded, and its box office legs will be short (chopped off?), but Warner Bros can still safely expect a US domestic gross of something in the $80M-$85M range and at least a couple of cheaply-made sequels to follow.
Holdover He’s Just Not That Into You (Warner Bros) is a strong #2 with a $5.05M second Friday and a possible $23.9M 4-day for a new 11-day cume of about $59.36M. Meanwhile, the French import Taken (Fox), from action maestro Luc Besson and cracker jack director Pierre Morel is continuing its amazing run, scoring $4.8M to start the frame and a shot at adding $23.8M by Tuesday. The Liam Neeson action flick’s new cume will be over $82M, surpassing the $69M it has accumulated in foreign territories (the movie was released in most international markets before it ever played here in the US).
Confessions of a Shopaholic (Disney), based on Sophie Kinsella’s bestselling novels and starring Isla Fisher, is performing very well, but slightly below expectations. The female-skewing comedy is tilting to the Under 25 crowd while managing a solid $4.4M on opening day, which could translate to $19.25M for the long weekend.
Rounding out the top 5 is Henry Selick’s Coraline (Focus) scaring up another $3.14M to start the weekend and riding huge matinees Saturday, Sunday and Monday to a projected $19.1M for 4 days. With a new cume of almost $40M by Tuesday, it appears that the $60M film has a chance to be profitable.
The message from Tom Tywker’s The International (Sony), seems perfectly-timed for our current world economy. Simplified, bankers are evil. If the theme doesn’t work now, when will it work?
Tywker is responsible for one of the most innovative action movies of all time, Run Lola Run, and critics seem to appreciate his chase sequences in The International, starring Oscar nominees Clive Owen (Closer) and Naomi Watts (21 Grams), but the movie’s opening weekend performance will be no better than respectable with $3M on Friday and a possible $12.6 for 4 days.
In other box office news, here’s something I never thought I would see in print. Paul Blart: Mall Cop (Sony) passed $100M domestic on Friday.
EXCLUSIVE STEVE MASON EARLY FRIDAY ESTIMATES
NEW – Friday the Thirteenth (Warner Bros) – $20M, $6,441 PTA, $20M cume
He’s Just Not That Into You (Warner Bros) – $5.05M, $1,591 PTA, $40.51M cume
Taken (Fox) – $4.8M, $1,544 PTA, $63.47M cume
NEW – Confessions of a Shopaholic (Disney) – $4.4M, $1,755 PTA, $4.4M cume
Coraline (Focus) – $3.1M, $1,336 PTA, $23.33M cume
NEW – The International (Sony) – $3M, $1,279 PTA, $3M cume
Pink Panther 2 (Sony) – $2.2M, $678 PTA, $15.52M cume
Paul Blart: Mall Cop (Sony) – $1.85M, $624 PTA, $100.66M cume
Push (Summit) – $1.75M, $757 PTA, $14.14M cume
Gran Torino (Warner Bros) – $1.34M, $584 PTA, $123.48M cume
The Uninvited (Dreamworks/Paramount) – $1.1M, $610 PTA, $20.46M cume
EXCLUSIVE STEVE MASON EARLY 4-DAY ESTIMATES
NEW – Friday the Thirteenth (Warner Bros) – $51.25M, $16,506 PTA, $55.25M cume
He’s Just Not That Into You (Warner Bros) – $23.9M, $7,528 PTA, $59.36M cume
Taken (Fox) – $23.8M, $7,655 PTA, $82.47M cume
NEW – Confessions of a Shopaholic (Disney) – $19.25M, $7,679 PTA, $19.25M cume
Coraline (Focus) – $19.1M, $8,233 PTA, $39.33M cume
NEW – The International (Sony) – $12.6M, $5,371 PTA, $12.6M cume
Pink Panther 2 (Sony) – $10.75M, $3,313 PTA, $24.07M cume
Paul Blart: Mall Cop (Sony) – $9.25M, $3,120 PTA, $108.06M cume
Push (Summit) – $8.5M, $3,675 PTA, $20.89M cume
Gran Torino (Warner Bros) – $5.9M, $2,562 PTA, $128.04M cume
The Uninvited (Dreamworks/Paramount) – $4.95M, $2,130 PTA, $24.31M cume