Monday, September 6, 2010

Clooney Tops Box Office With 'The American'




The summer movie season closed quietly as the top ten slumped to its worst performance of 2010 with audiences finding other ways to spend their Labor Day holiday weekend. Two of the three new releases - George Clooney's assassin pic The American and Robert Rodriguez's violent revenge actioner Machete - met with moderate bows while Drew Barrymore's romantic comedy Going the Distance failed to attract business. The top ten films tumbled to a mere $75M making for the lowest performance in nearly one year giving the marketplace little momentum going into the fall season.

For the first time in his career, George Clooney anchored a number one hit movie all by himself as the Focus release The American shot to the top with an estimated $13M in ticket sales over the Friday-to-Sunday portion of the long holiday frame. The R-rated drama averaged a decent $4,594 from 2,823 theaters and has grossed $16.1M in the five days since its Wednesday launch. The Oscar-winning actor has reached the top spot numerous times but always when surrounded by other major stars like with the Ocean's series or The Perfect Storm.

With the box office filled with films catering to teens and young adults, The American scored by playing to a more mature crowd. Autumn releases typically skew older so the Italy-set film was the appropriate choice to end off summer and welcome in the fall. The last time the chart was topped by such a low gross was Labor Day 2009 and the last film to open at number one with a smaller gross was Bangkok Dangerous with $7.8M two years ago over the September 5-7 session.

Holding up relatively well in its second weekend, the crime thriller Takers dropped to second with an estimated $11.5M falling 44% from its top spot debut. Sony's PG-13 offering has taken in a better-than-expected $37.9M in its first ten days of release and could be looking at a final take of around $60M.

After winning the box office race on Friday, Fox's Mexploitation actioner Machete finished in third place over the Friday-to-Sunday weekend period with an estimated $11.3M. Robert Rodriguez's Danny Trejo-led action-comedy played in 2,670 sites and averaged a mediocre $4,232 per location. The performance was almost identical to the $11.6M opening and $4,419 average of 2007's Grindhouse which featured a fake trailer for Machete which became the inspiration for the campy feature film. It was the only movie this weekend to see sales drop from Friday to Saturday with its 4% dip. Reviews were generally good for the R-rated bloodfest which also featured Robert De Niro, Jessica Alba, Steven Seagal, Michelle Rodriguez, Don Johnson, Cheech Marin, and Lindsay Lohan. With a cult audience coming out upfront, long-term prospects seem dull.

Tumbling 63% from its impressive debut last weekend, the fright flick The Last Exorcism took fourth place with an estimated $7.6M in ticket sales. Lionsgate has scared up a solid $32.3M in ten days and looks headed for a $42-45M finish.

Audiences showed no interest in Drew Barrymore's latest romantic comedy Going the Distance which opened poorly in fifth place with an estimated $6.9M. The R-rated pic about a couple trying to make a long distance relationship work averaged a weak $2,272 from 3,030 theaters. Co-starring Justin Long, the Warner Bros. release enjoyed the most theaters of any new release over the past two weeks, but also suffered the worst debut. Reviews were generally negative and the strict rating kept out younger teens.

The rest of the top ten was filled with holdovers that moviegoers were busy catching up on after a long hot summer. All dropped by less than 30%. Lionsgate's The Expendables grossed an estimated $6.8M, off 29%, raising the cume to $92.3M. Sony followed with its pair of late summer star-driven hits The Other Guys and Eat Pray Love which took in estimates of $5.4M and $4.9M, respectively. The Will Ferrell action-comedy dipped only 14% lifting the total to $106.9M while the Julia Roberts travel journal fell 29% and has banked $69M to date.

Summer's biggest non-sequel Inception eased by a scant 7% to an estimated $4.5M and has collected $277.1M thus far for Warner Bros. Rounding out the top ten was Universal's family comedy Nanny McPhee Returns with an estimated $3.6M, down 24%, and a disappointing $22.4M overall.

With the season coming to an end, the following are the top ten blockbusters of Summer 2010: Toy Story 3 ($408.1M), Iron Man 2 ($312.1M), The Twilight Saga: Eclipse ($298.7M), Inception ($277.1M), Despicable Me ($240.3M), Shrek Forever After ($238.3M), The Karate Kid ($175.9M), Grown Ups ($159.4M), The Last Airbender ($131M), and Salt ($115.2M).

# Title Sep 3 - 5


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 The American $ 12,969,000


1
$ 16,114,000 Focus
2 Takers 11,450,000


2
37,900,000 Sony
3 Machete 11,300,000


1
11,300,000 Fox
4 The Last Exorcism 7,550,000


2
32,320,000 Lionsgate
5 Going the Distance 6,885,000


1
6,885,000 Warner Bros.
6 The Expendables 6,750,000


4
92,320,000 Lionsgate
7 The Other Guys 5,400,000


5
106,866,000 Sony
8 Eat Pray Love 4,850,000


4
68,954,000 Sony
9 Inception 4,530,000


8
277,103,000 Warner Bros.
10 Nanny McPhee Returns 3,575,000


3
22,441,000 Universal










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