![]() Top Gun: Maverick, meanwhile, continues its run towards $700 million. The Super-Pets landing zone continues to appear to be somewhere between $75 million and $80 million. Planes had $70.8 million after 24 days and posted a $7.7 million fourth weekend. Another $5.7 million this weekend brings its total to $67.4 million. should have expected when they released an animated film this late in the summer. The $90 million-budgeted film is over $130 million worldwide.ĭC League of Super-Pets is also not going to reach $100 million, as Warner Bros. $90-95 million seems very realistic, but $100 million is still a reach. Bullet Train’s August doppelganger, The Dukes of Hazzard, got to $69 million after it made $5.9 million in its third weekend, so David Leitch’s film is now outpacing it. In fact, it was closer to Elysium’s $6.9 million. Bullet Train did not have the third weekend that either Freaky Friday ($9.3 million) or The 40 Year-Old Virgin ($13.3 million) had. Unforgiven and Parenthood are the only films to earn less than $67 million in that time frame and still reach $100 million, and the Eastwood film took a lengthy Oscar-run to achieve that. Only Sony’s Elysium came up short with $93 million. Freaky Friday got to $110.2 million in 20023 and The 40 Year-Old Virgin reached $109.4 million in 2005. ![]() Are people still holding onto $100 million as a possibility? Well, two of the three August releases to earn between $68-69 million after 17 days made it. 40% was the largest drop in the top 10 this week. But a final hunt of $28-38 million domestically for the $36 million-budgeted Beast is not going to feel great for Universal.īullet Train, which held on to the top spot for the past two weeks, fell back to third this weekend with $8 million. This also happens to be the weekend of horror classics An American Werewolf in London and David Cronenberg’s The Fly, which, with inflation, translate to roughly $24.7 and $18.9 million in opening ticket sales. On this same weekend in August, we have seen Snakes on a Plane ($13.8 million), Piranha in 3-D ($10.1 million), and 47 Meters Down: Uncaged ($8.4 million) so that number feels about right. ![]() Beast, the new film from Contraband and Everest director Baltasar Kormákur, opened to nearly half of Dragon Ball Super Hero with just $11.5 million this weekend. The Top 10 and Beyond: Beast Disappoints, Maverick Surpasses Infinity War Domesticallyįirst there was Lions for Lambs. Well, the fans did come out, and they spent $20.1 million on Super Hero this weekend, and second place wasn’t even close. ![]() ![]() The My Hero Academia films were not nearly as popular, opening between $2-3.1 million, but Crunchyroll clearly saw a spot to nab headlines: If the fans would just come out towards the end of summer as studios began to clear their plates before the autumn season, they could have a No. Just two years prior, before the pandemic, we saw Dragon Ball Super: Broly open to $9.8 million in 1,238 theaters and finish with over $30 million, showing that these films were not just opening weekend wonders for a handful of die-hards. While Dragon Ball barely missed besting that film head-to-head ( MK opened to $23.3 million), the latter also ultimately outgrossed the former by over $7 million, finishing with $49.5 million. Why not? Just last year Demon Slayer the Movie: Mugen Train opened in 1,600 theaters and grossed $21.2 million in its opening weekend against Warner Bros.’ new Mortal Kombat. Crunchyroll’s Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero took it handily in the company’s largest release strategy to date in 3,130 theaters. This weekend the top spot at the box office does not belong to Idris Elba punching a lion or Brad Pitt punching everyone on a train. ![]()
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