..Gary Dretzka
..
Noah Forrest
..Leonard Klady
..David Poland
..Douglas Pratt
..Ray Pride
..Kim Voynar
..Michael Wilmington

June 25, 2006
June 18, 2006
June 11, 2006
June 4, 2006
May 29, 2006
May 21, 2006
May 14, 2006
May 7, 2006
April 30, 2006
April 23, 2006
April 16, 2006
April 9, 2006
April 2, 2006
March 26, 2006
March 19, 2006
March 12, 2006
March 5, 2006
Feb 26, 2006
Feb 20, 2006
Feb 10, 2006
Feb 4, 2006
Jan 29, 2006
Jan 22, 2006
Jan 16, 2006
Jan 8, 2006
Jan 2, 2006




July 2, 2006
Weekend Estimates
Worldwide Grosses
Domestic Market Share

Up … Up … and Oy Vey!

Superman Returns flexed its pecs with an estimated $52.3 million to lead weekend movie going. The frame also saw the bow of The Devil Wears Prada with a steelier than expected $26.8 million in an overall session with slight box office improvement from 2005.

Though the Independence Day holiday is officially on Tuesday, much of the nation will be taking a 5-day vacation with government agencies the major exception to the rule with a business as usual Monday.

The highly anticipated Superman redux got a jump start on the holiday period with a Wednesday launch that set an opening day box office record. It entered its first weekend with slightly more than $32 million banked and initial industry expectations it would soar past $100 million by Sunday. However, a steep second day drop indicated the film would fall short of its target and initial reports peg its five day domestic performance at slightly better than $84 million. Critical response has run the gamut from raves to stinging barbs.

Fifty-four weeks ago Warner Bros. dusted off another comic book hero in Batman Begins with comparable three and five-days results of $48.7 million and $72.9 million. It went on to gross a bit better than $200 million in North America and another $175 million internationally. With media speculation that the film has to gross in excess of $600 million theatrically to reach break even, its commercial take off is a dose of Kryptonite for the Man of Steel.

The picture nonetheless set a record for its Imax dates of about $5 million on 76 screens. It was formerly held by the Batman reinvention with $3.1 million.

Overseas, Superman sidestepped the kryptonic World Cup with initial dates in 11 territories in Southeast Asia and Australia with sturdy opening day debuts in all territories including a $650,000 gross in Korea, $919,000 in Australia, $408,000 in the Philippines and $256,000 in Thailand. Its four-day tally in Australia was slightly less than $4 million and Korea was best in show at %5 million. The weekend generated $19.8 million from 1,750 playdates.

The adaptation of The Devil Wears Prada proved an apt piece of counter programming with studio projections of a $20 million debut smashed to the positive side. A contemporary spin on All About Eve set in the milieu of a fashion magazine, its opening day gross of $9.3 million anticipated a $30 million weekend but its box office experienced a 2% drop on Saturday that was a surprise. A Fox spokesman couldn't explain why the film was playing like a picture aimed at teenage boys when Friday exit polls showed 61% of its audience was older than 25 years of age.

Weekend revenues were shaping up at roughly $155 million for a 6% boost from the prior weekend and 5% improved from 2005. Last year's holiday offering was The War of the Worlds that grossed $65 million for the three-day span. While summer seasonal box office has generally been better than last year's record, admissions are no better than status quo. The international picture is murkier with fingers crossed for a major surge following on the heels of football's imminent finale.

Holdover business saw a sharp second weekend drop of 52% for the prior frame's leader Click. Exhibitors are noticing that half way through the season the top titles appear to be experiencing declines that are sharper than usual with new event pictures sapping rather than expanding the marketplace.

Activity in the niches continued to be dominated by A Prairie Home Companion and An Inconvenient Truth with Wordplay maintaining a nice toehold several rungs down the ladder in 95 theaters. Its current weekend is estimated at $273,000.

The best of the alternative debuts was the black comic Strangers with Candy with a $41,200 gross from two engagements. The non-fiction whodunit Who Killed the Electric Car? puttered just past $39,000 at eight garages.

- by Leonard Klady


Weekend Estimates - June 30 - July 2, 2006

Title
Distributor
Gross (average)
% change
Theaters
Cume
Superman Returns
WB
52.3 (12,860)
-
4065
84.3
The Devil Wears Prada
Fox
26.8 (9,400)
-
2847
26.8
Click
Sony
19.3 (5,130)
-52%
3764
77.8
Cars
BV
13.9 (3,750)
-40%
3706
181.9
Nacho Libre
Par
5.8 (1,880)
-54%
3082
64.6
The Lake House
WB
4.6 (1,730)
-48%
2645
38.8
Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drifr
Uni
4.3 (1,620)
-56%
2670
51.6
Waist Deep
Focus
3.3 (3,250)
-65%
1006
15.1
The Break-Up
Uni
2.8 (1,470)
-57%
1912
110.1
The Da Vinci Code
Sony
2.3 (1,650)
-44%
1384
209.8
X-Men: The Last Stand
Fox
2.1 (1,330)
-57%
1558
228.6
Garfield: A Tale of Two Kitties
Fox
2.0 (930)
-61%
2150
21.5
An Inconvenient Truth
Par Classics
1.6 (2,670)
-22%
587
12.3
A Prairie Home Companion
Picturehouse
1.3 (1,830)
-43%
717
14.8
Over the Hedge
Par
1.1 (930)
-61%
1208
147.6
The Omen
Fox
.52 (830)
-77%
625
53.5
Mission: Impossible III
Par
.51 (1,010)
-29%
507
132.3
Weekend Total ($500,000+ Films)
$144.50
-
-
-
% Change (Last Year)
-
6%
-
-
-
% Change (Last Week)
-
7%
-
-
-
Also debuting/expanding
Wordplay
IFC
.27 (2,870)
-16%
95
0.8
Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man
Lions Gate
44,700 (3,730)
160%
12
0.08
Strangers with Candy
Thinkfilm
41,200 (20,600)
-
2
0.04
Who Killed the Electric Car?
Sony Classics
39,300 (4,910)
-
8
0.04
The Motel
Palm
8,070 (8,070)
-
1
0.01
The Blood of My Brother
Lifesize
1,620 (1,620)
-
1
0.01

Top Domestic Grosses: January 1 - June 29, 2006

X-Men: The Last Stand
Fox
226,483,394
The Da Vinci Code
Sony
207,492,832
Ice Age: The Meltdown
Fox
193,640,718
Cars
BV
168,021,783
Over the Hedge
Par
146,438,334
Mission: Impossible III
Par
131,830,760
The Break-Up
Uni
107,239,150
Scary Movie 4
Weinstein Co.
89,873,819
Failure to Launch
Par
88,822,973
Inside Man
Uni
88,469,545
The Pink Panther
Sony
83,137,123
The Chronicles of Narnia *
BV
82,270,870
Eight Below
BV
81,612,565
Brokeback Mountain *
Focus
70,615,735
V for Vendetta
WB
70,503,491
Big Momma's House 2
Fox
70,165,972
RV
Sony
67,416,072
Medea's Family Reunion
Lions Gate
63,445,832
Underworld: Evolution
Sony
62,615,442
The Shaggy Dog
BV
60,662,059

Domestic Market Share: January 1 - June 29, 2006

Fox (15) 788 17.90%
Sony (17) 760.9 17.30%
Buena Vista (16) 561.1 12.70%
Paramount (9) 503.4 11.40%
Universal (12) 500.1 11.30%
Warner Bros. (13) 367.9 8.40%
Weinstein Co. (9) 191.5 4.30%
Lions Gate (11) 166.5 3.80%
New Line (7) 119.2 2.70%
Focus (8) 113.4 2.60%
Fox Searchlight (7) 96.1 2.20%
Sony Classics (13) 47.5 1.10%
DreamWorks (3) 24.7 0.60%
MGM (1) 22.5 0.50%
Other * (153) 142.4 3.20%
- 4405.2 100.00%

 

 


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