The Amazing Movie Show
Reviews, history, and background on Horror, Science Fiction, Fantasy Films, and related media.

Box Office 11/9/09: Christmas Starts Slow



Halloween has come and gone, the holiday lights are appearing in the retail capitals of the world and Robert Zemeckis has another fantastically expensive motion capture animation, designed to entertain us with the volume turned up to 11. $30.05M is on the low side for this kind of thing but, given that A Christmas Carol was released a full seven weeks before the Big Day, it has at least a fighting chance of reaching its $200M budget.
Historically, where Christmas movies are concerned, only the Tim Allen Santa Clause movies open this early, and Carol just bested 2002's The Santa Clause 2, which opened on November 6th (but cost a relatively modest $65M) and was beaten out by How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) which opened on 11/17 with $55M, Elf (2003), which opened 11/7 with $31.11M, and (depressingly) Four Christmases (2008), which opened 11/26/08 with $31.06M.
At #2, Michael Jackson's This Is It is down 43% with $13.15M while The Men Who Stare at Goats opened with $12.70 at #3. The Fourth Kind is at #4 with $12.23, desperately hoping to soak up some of that Paranormal Activity money (budget undisclosed, but Milla Jovovich's trailer was doubtless more than PA's entire cost). At #5 Paranormal Activity itself comes close to crossing the $100M mark with $8.27M, for a running total of $97.10M - 'nuff said, I'm out of superlatives (see my review here).
Richard Kelly's The Box is at #6 with a disappointing – given its 2,635 theater release – $7.57M (though the budget was a lean $25M). Couples Retreat and Law Abiding Citizen hold on at positions seven and eight, and at #9, in spite of its detractors, Where the Wild Things Are is doing okay with $4.17M for a four week total of $69.70M, more than can be said for Astro Boy, which has failed to find a significant audience, bringing in $2.62M for a three week total of just $15.11M.
Saw VI sunk 61%, with $2.03M and a three week total of $26.25M, placing it easily in profit against its $11M budget, albeit as the least successful of the Saw series. Oscar hopeful Precious: Based on the Novel "Push" by Sapphire, did remarkably well at #12, bringing in $1.87M in just 18 theaters.
Next weekend sees the launch of marketing juggernaut 2012, Wes Anderson's Fantastic Mr Fox (review here) on limited release, and also Richard Curtis's thankfully renamed The Boat That Rocked, which will be know in the US as Pirate Radio.

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San Francisco, CA, United States
Born in the UK, a graphic designer and long-time film fanatic, Gareth has been working on his book: the Amazing Movie Show, for over 10 years.

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