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

September 4, 2006
August 27, 2006
August 20, 2006
August 13, 2006
August 6, 2006
July 30, 2006
July 23, 2006
July 16, 2006
July 9, 2006
July 2, 2006
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




September 4 , 2006
Weekend Estimates
Summer Market Share
Domestic Market Share

The Weekend of Tears...

The Gridiron Gang ascended, comparatively speaking, to weekend prominence with an estimated opening gross of $14.7 million. Three other films made their national debuts and followed in the rankings with the period whodunit The Black Dahlia bowing to $10.5 million; the animated baseball pic Everybody's Hero was next with $6 million and the thirtysomething comedy-drama The Last Kiss rounded out the quartet at $4.7 million.

None of the films played quite to expectations. Overall weekend revenues were roughly $75 million for a slight 9% boost from seven days earlier. However, they lagged behind the 2005 frame by 11% when Just Like Heaven took top spot with a $16.4 million launch.

It appears that all sport-themed movies must now be based upon a true story and The Gridiron Gang is no exception. The new entry centers on a teacher's efforts to mold the character of a group of juvenile detainees by teaching them to play as a team and learn cooperation and self dignity. Tracking anticipated an $18 million bow but the recent release of another true football saga - Invincible - likely dampened its appeal.

Similarly some pundits were predicting as much as a $20 million debut for the adaptation of James Ellroy's novel The Black Dahlia. It was more reasonable to translate data to project $15 million on the high end. Exit polls confirmed the fictionalized version of the infamous 1940s murder case drew a crowd that skewed 30 years and older and just last weekend one could see tepid results for Hollywoodland that has a significant number of comparably appealing elements.

While hardly the film that caused the dam to bust on animated fare for kids and parents, Everybody's Heroes was further confirmation that there's a ceiling to this audience. And of greater significance is the fact that there's no guarantee the pictures will open to $10 million; will have better stamina than live-action fare or will exceed its box office by 100% in DVD sales.

The Last Kiss, loosely based on an Italian success, appeared to be caught between a specialized or mainstream release and the tween approach was not the solution. Again, audience response was lukewarm.

A scan of current films in wide release that are still grossing in excess of $500,000 reveals but a single title (the Pirates sequel) aimed at broad appeal that emerged as a summer success. The other unqualified hits that include Talladega Nights, Step Up, Little Miss Sunshine and The Illusionist were all initially narrowly targeted and that's not particularly edifying news for major distributors. The aforementioned quartet while profitable cannot generate the hefty returns that bankroll a studio or makeup for high profile movies that strike out in the marketplace.

Industry anxiety essentially breaks down to the grim prospect that if there really is a cultural shift in where and how the audience elects to see movies, its construct for ensuring profitability has to be radically altered. Historically Hollywood has been averse to change; adapting most often when the situation was catastrophic.

The frame was also very active with niche openers with a better than expected $332,000 launch at 164 locations for Artie Lange's Beer League. It bowed in general release in New York, Cleveland and Philadelphia and its performance should earn it additional regional exposure.

The most impressive new entry was the critically embraced documentary The U.S. vs. John Lennon with slightly more than $72,000 from six theaters. There was also an unexpectedly potent near $30,000 tally for the Rowan Atkinson comedy Keeping Mum, albeit on just two screens.

The rest of the freshmen slate proved lackluster including non-fiction fare such as Jesus Camp and The Ground Truth, the Brit import Confetti and the Orlando Bloom drama Haven. Initial launches ranged from eight to 24 playdates and none were able to generate as high as a $2,000 location average.

- by Leonard Klady


Weekend Estimates - September 15-17, 2006

Title
Distributor
Gross (average)
% change
Theaters
Cume
The Gridiron Gang 
Sony
14.7 (4,210)
x
3501
14.7
The Black Dahlia
Uni
10.5 (4,700)
x
2226
10.5
Everyone's Hero
Fox
6.0 (2,090)
x
2896
6
The Last Kiss
Par
4.7 (3,470)
x
1357
4.7
The Covenant
Sony
4.7 (1,740)
-47%
2681
15.7
Invincible
BV
3.9 (1,390)
-30%
2830
50.9
The Illusionist
YF/FS/Odeon
3.5 (2,450)
-22%
1438
23
Little Miss Sunshine
Fox Searchlight
3.3 (2,320)
-22%
1436
46.4
Crank
Lions Gate
2.8 (1,290)
-42%
2177
24.5
Hollywoodland
Focus
2.7 (1,760)
-54%
1548
10.5
The Protector
Weinstein Co.
2.3 (1,520)
-54%
1541
8.9
The Wicker Man
WB
2.0 (850)
-50%
2407
20.7
Talladega Nights
Sony
1.9 (1,010)
-36%
1912
145
Barnyard
Par
1.6 (870)
-41%
1818
69.1
Accepted
Uni
1.4 (950)
-45%
1458
34.1
Step Up
BV
1.3 (920)
-49%
1408
63.5
Pirates of Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
BV
1.2 (1,160)
-39%
1039
418.3
World Trade Center
Par
1.1 (720)
-59%
1474
69.1
How to Eat Worms
New Line
.68 (610)
-54%
1121
12.3
Beerfest
WB
.52 (730)
-63%
714
18.4
Weekend Total ($500,000+ Films)
$70.80
x
x
x
% Change (Last Year)
x
-11%
x
x
x
% Change (Last Week)
x
9%
x
x
x
Also debuting/expanding
Artie Lange's Beer League
Echo Bridge
.33 (2,020)
x
164
0.33
The U.S. vs. John Lennon
Lions Gate
72,400 (12,070)
x
6
0.07
Haven
FreeStyle/YFG
38,300 (1,600)
x
24
0.04
Keeping Mum
Thinkfilm
29,800 (14,900)
x
2
0.03
Confetti
Fox Searchlight
21,200 (1,770)
x
12
0.02
Jesus Camp
Magnolia
17,600 (1,170)
x
15
0.02
The Ground Truth
Focus
14,700 (1,840)
x
8
0.01
Al Franken: God Spoke
Balcony
9,900 (4,950)
x
2
0.01


The Summer Chart: May 4 - September 4, 2006

Distributor
Gross
Percentage
% change 2005
Rank 2005
Buena Vista
786
20.90%
275%
7
Sony
704.1
18.70%
351%
8
Fox
543.5
14.40%
-34%
1
Paramount *
499.3
13.30%
-36%
3 & 6
Warner Bros.
417
11.10%
-37%
2
Universal
379.1
10.10%
29%
4
Lions Gate
67.8
1.80%
-18%
10
New Line
51.7
1.40%
-82%
5
Fox Searchlight
47.4
1.30%
N/A
N/A
MGM
35.8
0.90%
N/A
N/A
Focus 
32.5
0.90%
-34%
11
Weinstein Co.
30.2
0.80%
N/A
N/A
FreeStyle
25.3
0.70%
N/A
N/A
Paramount Classics
25
0.70%
-19%
12
Other **
114.1
3.00%
17%
N/A
* includes DreamWorks
3758.8
100.00%
5.80%
x

Domestic Market Share: January 1 - August 24, 2006

Sony (21)
1108.6
17.80%
Buena Vista (18)
1084.5
17.40%
Fox (18)
988.9
15.90%
Universal (15)
675.6
10.80%
Paramount (11)
633.3
10.20%
Warner Bros. (15)
623.3
10.00%
Weinstein Co. (10)
208.6
3.30%
Lions Gate (13)
192.3
3.10%
New Line (8)
139.5
2.20%
Focus (9)
132.5
2.10%
Fox Searchlight (8)
112.9
1.80%
MGM (3)
52.6
0.80%
Sony Classics (16)
49.9
0.80%
Other * (196)
233.6
3.80%
* none greater than 0.45%
6236.1
100.00%

 

 


Home | Movie City News | Contact Us
Report broken links and other web problems to
Webmaster
©2009. Movie City News, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Movie City Geek, Movie City Indie and MCG are trademarks of Movie City News.

.