Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Nothing Beats Rio For The Easter Weekends.



         Last weekend, the angry and not-so-angry birds of the 3D animated smash Rio held onto the top spot at the North American box office for a second weekend in a row. Results for the Easter frame's three new releases were good as the Tyler Perry comedy Madea's Big Happy Family, the circus romance Water for Elephants, and the nature documentary African Cats all connected with their respective audiences. Ticket sales for the Top 20 were up a sharp 40% from a year ago which was not a holiday session, but down a troubling 23% from 2010's record Easter weekend. Most holdovers did remain strong though.
         Still attracting large crowds, Rio fended off the Tyler Perry machine to retain the number one spot with an estimated $26.8M over the holiday weekend dropping only 32% from its debut to boost the ten-day tally to a muscular $81.3M. The hold was on par with what Fox saw nine years ago with Ice Age which fell 35% in its second weekend in March 2002 which was not a holiday. With schools out on Good Friday, Rio had a more available audience that day helping to cushion the blow. Both films were directed by Carlos Saldanha as were the Ice Age sequels.
         Rio's sophomore decline was almost even with last spring's leggy hit How To Train Your Dragon which slipped 34%, but easily bested the second weekend drops for recent spring toons Rango (-41%), Monsters vs. Aliens (-45%), and Horton Hears a Who (-45%). At its current pace, Rio could find its way to the neighborhood of $160M from North America and plenty more overseas. The international haul after three weeks soared to $204.7M after a sturdy $44.2M international frame putting the global gross at a towering $286M with much more to come. The worldwide take should easily climb past the $500M mark in the coming weeks as 3D animated kidpics, especially ones set outside of the U.S., travel very well.
         Tyler Perry scored the fourth biggest opening of his career with his latest comedy Madea's Big Happy Family which debuted close behind in second place with an estimated $25.8M from 2,288 theaters for a robust $11,254 average. While on its way to being another moneymaker for the filmmaker and Lionsgate, this new PG-13 entry showed some audience erosion when compared to the director's past films. Happy fell behind the openings of Perry's last two Madea pics - 2006's Madea's Family Reunion ($30M) and 2009's Madea Goes to Jail ($41M). Perry's most recent comedy, last year's Why Did I Get Married Too which bowed on Good Friday as well, also debuted better with $29.3M.
         While Tyler Perry films tend to draw in his fan base on the first weekend and suffer large declines in following weeks - his films tend to make 45-48% of their totals in the first three days - Happy scored a rare A CinemaScore so word-of-mouth could allow for a slightly better road ahead. African Americans made up the usual share of the audience (81%) but females were a somewhat smaller portion of the crowd at 72%. Married Too was 80% female.
          Reese Witherspoon and Robert Pattinson drew a solid crowd for their romantic drama Water for Elephants which premiered in third place with an estimated $17.5M. Based on the best-selling novel, the PG-13 film averaged $6,212 from 2,817 locations and played heavily to female audiences, lovers of the book, and Twilight fans that follow Pattinson religiously. Critics had mixed feelings but the built-in audiences came out anyway giving Fox the best opening for an adult drama this year so far. Mature-skewing thrillers and comedies have done exceptionally well this year, but regular dramas have seen more modest numbers on the first weekend. An A- CinemaScore suggests a good run ahead as counter-programming to a steady diet of testosterone flicks about to attack multiplexes.
          The Easter holiday, and a concentrated advertising effort reminding audiences of it, gave a big boost to the kidpic Hop which climbed 16% from last weekend to an estimated $12.5M. The Easter Bunny pic appropriately broke the $100M mark on Easter Sunday putting the 24-day total at $100.5M.
With most major holdovers dropping by less than 30%, horror fourquel Scream 4 collapsed in its second weekend tumbling by a steep 62% to an estimated $7.2M. With $31.2M in ten days, a final gross of roughly $40M seems likely for The Weinstein Co. release putting it below the much-loved fright pic Insidious which has been winning over genre fans all month.
          Disneynature's latest Earth Day documentary African Cats debuted in sixth place with an estimated $6.4M over an incredibly front-loaded weekend. With opening day being both Good Friday and Earth Day, its $3.3M take accounted for a whopping 52% of the three-day figure. The G-rated pic about feline families in Africa was narrated by Samuel L. Jackson and averaged a commendable $5,246 over the weekend from 1,220 sites. Reviews were mostly positive. Cats generated an opening gross and average similar to those of the distributor's Oceans from one year ago which bowed to $6.1M over the Friday-to-Sunday portion of its four-day launch.
          Four holdovers rounded out the top ten, all within $500,000 of each other and with low declines. Sony's uplifting girlpower drama Soul Surfer slipped just 23% to an estimated $5.6M for a $28.7M cume to date. The sleeper hit horror flick Insidious followed with an estimated $5.4M, down just 20%, with an impressive $44.2M to date.
         Focus saw its action entry Hanna drop 28% to an estimated $5.3M while Summit's train disaster thriller Source Code fell a mere 18% to an estimated $5.1M. Totals to date are $31.7M and $44.7M, respectively.
        Morgan Spurlock's latest documentary POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold delivered a mediocre debut bowing in 18 theaters with an estimated $135,000 for a moderate $7,500 average. Marketed as the first film about product placement to be fully financed by product placement, the Sony Classics release did succeed in getting its title sponsor publicized in brand new places although there is no telling what effect it will have on pomegranate juice sales. Reviews for Greatest were mixed but fairly positive.
         The summer box office gets an early headstart with this Friday's opening of Fast Five which kicked off its international run over Easter weekend with large number one bows in Australia, New Zealand, the U.K., and South Korea. The fifth installment in the lucrative Fast and Furious franchise grossed a meaty $24M from 957 theaters across the four markets with series-best openings in all territories. Australia debuted with a mammoth $10.7M setting a new studio record for Universal there while the U.K. generated $8.8M. Ten territories open next weekend along with North America including Germany, Russia, and Spain feeding audience hunger after a long drought of action tentpoles.

# Title Apr 22 - 24


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 Rio $ 26,323,321


2
$ 80,806,562 Fox
2 Madea's Big Happy Family 25,068,677


1
25,068,677 Lionsgate
3 Water for Elephants 16,842,353


1
16,842,353 Fox
4 Hop 12,185,905


4
100,224,905 Universal
5 Scream 4 7,030,747


2
31,035,010 Dimension
6 African Cats 6,003,200


1
6,003,200 Disney
7 Soul Surfer 5,436,868


3
28,502,151 Sony
8 Hanna 5,277,000


3
31,718,000 Focus
9 Insidious 5,207,622


4
44,001,416 FilmDistrict
10 Source Code 5,091,347


4
44,692,591 Summit

Blu-ray 19th April Releases

The King's Speech [Blu-ray]

Starz/Anchor Bay / 2010 / 118 Minutes / Rated R
Street Date: April 19, 2011

4 out of 5  Strongly recommended





Genres: Drama, biography

Starring:  Colin Firth, Helena Bonham Carter, Geoffrey Rush
Director: Tom Hooper

Plot Synopsis: Candidates for president and prime minister choose to run, but kings rarely have a choice. Such was the case for Prince Albert, known by family members as Bertie (Colin Firth), whose stutter made public speaking difficult. Upon the death of his father, George V (Michael Gambon, making the most of a small part), the crown went to Bertie's brother, Edward VIII (Guy Pearce), who abdicated to marry divorcée Wallis Simpson. All the while, Bertie and his wife, Elizabeth (Helena Bonham Carter, excellent), try to find a solution to his stammer. Nothing works until they meet Australian émigré Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush), a failed actor operating out of a threadbare office. He believes Bertie's problem stems from emotional rather than physiological issues, leading to a clash of wills that allows the Oscar®-winning Rush (Shine) and the Oscar-nominated Firth (A Single Man) to do some of their best work (in a neat bit of casting, Firth's Pride and Prejudice costar, Jennifer Ehle, plays Logue's wife). All their efforts, from the tense to the comic--Bertie doesn't stutter when he swears--lead to the speech King George VI must make to the British public on the eve of World War II. At a time when his country needs him the most, he can't afford to fail. As Stephen Frears did in The Queen, Tom Hooper (HBO's Elizabeth I) lends vulnerability to a royal figure, showing how isolating that life can be--and how much difference a no-nonsense friend like Logue can make.


Gulliver's Travels [Blu-ray]

20th Century Fox / 2010 / PG
Street Date: April 19, 2011








Genres: Comedy, fantasy, family

Starring:  Nicole Kidman and Aaron Eckhart
Director: Rob Letterman

Plot Synopsis: Jack Black (Kung Fu Panda, School of Rock) is larger than life in this epic comedy-adventure based on the classic tale. When a shipwreck lands a lowly mailroom clerk named Gulliver (Black) on the fantastical island of Lilliput, he transforms into a giant — in size and ego. Gulliver’s tall tales and heroic deeds win the hearts of the tiny Lilliputians, but when he loses it all and puts his newfound friends in peril, Gulliver must find a way to undo the damage. Through it all, Gulliver may just learn that it’s how big you are on the inside that counts.
 


Rabbit Hole [Blu-ray]

Lionsgate / 2010 / 91 Minutes / Rated PG-13
Street Date: April 19, 2011

3.5 out of 5 Recommended






Genres: Drama, thriller

Starring:  Nicole Kidman and Aaron Eckhart
Director: John Cameron Mitchell

Plot Synopsis: This is the extraordinary story of Becca and Howie. Eight months ago, they had a picture-perfect life with their young son. Now, they are posing as normal in the wake of an enormous loss; blindly looking for footing in a sea of new emotions. This is the remarkably moving journey of a couple finding their way back to love.



Glee: Encore [Blu-ray]

20th Century Fox / 2010 / Unrated
Street Date: April 19, 2011







Genres: TV series, musical, drama

Starring: Lea Michele, Jane Lynch, Matthew Morrison and Cory Monteith
Director: Brad Falchuk, Ian Brennan

Plot Synopsis: Put on your dancing shoes and get ready to Gleek Out! This full-length DVD features a set list of Season One’s most sensational musical numbers – back to back so the party never has to end! All your favorites are here, including Queen’s “Somebody To Love, Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing” and Madonna’s “Express Yourself!”

Other releases/ Back catalog releases:



Rio Holding Strong At No.1 Spot



         Last weekend, in what was expected to be a close race, the animated birds of Rio trounced the 10-years-in-the-waiting horror sequel Scream 4 while holdovers were a mixed bag.
Fox has another animated hit on its hands (along with a possible franchise) as Rio opened with $39.2M this weekend, according to final studio figures, from 3,826 theaters for a per screen average of $10,252. The opening was almost exactly on par with Hop which opened two weeks ago to $37.5M and a $10,490 average. With no built-in audience from a previous installment and a brand new concept, the opening for Rio was pretty good, although the 3D surcharges should have added a few more dollars. Hop was in 2D and opened on 250 less screens. Still, $39M is nothing to sneeze at and other than Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil, there are no other family films coming out until Kung Fu Panda 2 at the end of May, so Rio should see some good legs over the next few weeks.
          11 years after the last installment, the masked killer(s) of Scream 4 returned with a soft opening of $18.7M. Expectations ran high amongst fans of the original trilogy, but those expectations didn't turn into dollars as its per screen average of $5,656 was barely higher than the film that debuted in eleventh place this week. It seems fans came out this weekend but not a lot of new fans were created which was a bit of a surprise since horror fans are usually dependable. The last horror film to come out was two weeks ago with Insidious which is holding on remarkably well, and may have actually pulled out a few customers from Scream 4. Insidious opened to $13.3M with a $5,551 average but has fallen by less than 30% each weekend since.
         After a 2-week reign on top, the birds of Rio pushed the Easter Bunny of Hop down into third with $10.7M, down 48% from last weekend bringing its cume to $82.2M. Obviously the entrance of a new animated family film hurt, but Hop is still on target to get to $110-115M overall. In its second weekend, the young assassin Hanna landed in fourth with $7.3M falling 41% and bringing its total gross to $23.3M. A final number of around $40M is likely. The true-life story of Soul Surfer finished in fifth this weekend falling a slim 30% from last weekend to finish with $7.3M bringing its total to $19.9M. A final gross in the area of $40M is possible.
        Warner's remake of Arthur fell 43% into sixth place with $6.8M bringing its cume to $22.2M. Look for another final total in the $40M range. Seventh place belonged to the horror entry Insidious which had the best hold in the Top 10, dropping only 27% to $6.7M and bringing its current total to $35.9M after three weeks. Based on its strong holds even with a major horror film opening this weekend, there is the outside chance that Insidious could eventually out gross Scream 4 which would have been unthinkable even three days ago. Another film with a strong hold ended in eighth place this weekend as Source Code fell a slim 27% to $6.2M bringing its cume to $36.9M.
        The Universal flop Your Highness followed with the biggest drop in the Top 10 falling 58% to $4M for a 2-week total of only $16.1M. Look for a final tally in the $25M range and a quick trip on to DVD. Rounding out the Top 10 was Relativity's Limitless with $3.7M, down 33%, for a $69.6M total.
Robert Redford's latest directorial work The Conspirator opened in eleventh this weekend with $3.5M from 707 screens for an average of $4,963.

# Title Apr 15 -17


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 Rio $ 39,225,962


1
$ 39,225,962 Fox
2 Scream 4 18,692,090


1
18,692,090 Dimension
3 Hop 10,715,205


3
82,157,605 Universal
4 Hanna 7,282,546


2
23,282,858 Focus
5 Soul Surfer 7,268,502


2
19,865,129 Sony
6 Arthur 6,755,340


2
22,163,757 Warner Bros.
7 Insidious 6,744,623


3
35,870,891 FilmDistrict
8 Source Code 6,209,058


3
36,898,580 Summit
9 Your Highness 4,019,710


2
16,077,475 Universal
10 Limitless 3,660,104


5
69,589,322 Relativity










11 The Conspirator 3,509,048


1
3,509,048 Roadside
12 The Lincoln Lawyer 2,884,979


5
50,454,640 Lionsgate
13 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 2,081,944


4
48,122,773 Fox
14 Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 1,686,347


1
1,686,347 Rocky Mountain
15 Win Win 1,276,196


4
5,033,567 Fox Searchlight
16 Jane Eyre 993,232


5
6,605,035 Focus
17 Rango 715,526


7
118,775,731 Paramount
18 Born To Be Wild 625,014


2
1,840,529 Warner Bros.
19 Sucker Punch 606,242


4
35,292,286 Warner Bros.
20 Battle: Los Angeles 507,452


6
82,193,266 Sony

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Blu-ray 12th April Releases

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1 (Three-Disc Blu-ray / DVD Combo + Digital Copy)

Warner Brothers / 2010 / 146 Minutes / Rated PG-13
Street Date: April 15, 2011

















































































































Genres: Action, Adventure, Mystery, Family

Starring:
Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson
Director: David Yates

Plot Synopsis:
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part I is a brooding, slower-paced film than its predecessors, the result of being just one half of the final story (the last book in the series was split into two movies, released in theaters eight months apart). Because the penultimate film is all buildup before the final showdown between the teen wizard and the evil Voldemort (which does not occur until The Deathly Hallows, Part II), Part I is a road-trip movie, a heist film, a lot of exposition, and more weight on its three young leads, who up until now were sufficiently supported by a revolving door of British thesps throughout the series. Now that all the action takes place outside Hogwarts--no more Potions classes, Gryffindor scarves, or Quidditch matches--Daniel Radcliffe (Harry), Emma Watson (Hermione), and Rupert Grint (Ron) shoulder the film almost entirely on their own. After a near-fatal ambush by Voldemort's Death Eaters, the three embark on a quest to find and destroy the remaining five horcruxes (objects that store pieces of Voldemort's soul). Fortunately, as the story gets more grave--and parents should be warned, there are some scenes too frightening or adult for young children--so does the intensity. David Yates, who directed the Harry Potter films Order of the Phoenix and The Half-Blood Prince, drags the second half a little, but right along with some of the slower moments are some touching surprises (Harry leading Hermione in a dance, the return of Dobby in a totally non-annoying way). Deathly Hallows, Part I will be the most confusing for those not familiar with the Potter lore, particularly in the shorthand way characters and terminology weave in and out. For the rest of us, though, watching these characters over the last decade and saying farewell to a few faces makes it all bittersweet that the end is near (indeed, an early scene in which Hermione casts a spell that makes her Muggle parents forget her existence, in case she doesn't return, is particularly emotional). Despite its challenges, Deathly Hallows, Part I succeeds in what it's most meant to do: whet your appetite for the grand conclusion to the Harry Potter series.

Disc Features:

Disc 1
  • The Last Days of Privet Drive (HD, 2 min.)
  • Hagrid's Motorbike (HD, 4 min.)
  • Magical Tents! (HD, 2 min.)
  • Creating Dobby and Kreacher (HD, 4 min.) 
  • The Return of Griphook (HD, 4 min.)
Disc 2
  • The Seven Harrys (HD, 5 min.) — The special effects for the Polyjuice Potion scene at the beginning are explained..
  • On the Green with Rupert, Tom, Oliver, and James (HD, 13 min.)

  • Dan, Rupert, and Emma's Running Competition (HD, 3 min.) 
  • Godric's Hollow/The Harry and Nagini Battle (HD, 6 min.) — Shooting Godric's Hollow and the battle between Harry and Voldemort's snake is discussed here with the cast and crew.
  • The Frozen Lake (HD, 4 min.) — The lake scene where Harry finds himself being strangled by the locket is discussed here. You're able to see exactly how they filmed it and what it took.
  • Additional Scenes (HD, 11 min.) — Eight scenes are included here. As a person who hasn't read the books I enjoyed the simple scene used to explain the radio that Ron carries around with him. I also really liked the scene between Harry and Mrs. Drusley who has a rare special moment with Harry. There's a funny scene that involves Ron and Harry disguised as Ministry workers who take an elevator ride with Mr. Weasley. Most of the scenes here would have been nice to have in the movie for Harry Potter dummies like me. They're good filler scenes that help explain more about certain objects and help explain character's motives.
  • 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1: Behind the Soundtrack (HD, 4 min.) —
  • The Wizarding World of Harry Potter – Promotional Trailer (HD, 6 min.) — The Universal
Other releases/ Back catalog releases:







Hop Still Strong For The Straight 2nd Week At No.1




          Last weekend, Universal's hit kidpic Hop became the first film of 2011 to spend back-to-back weeks at number one as the bunny pic fended off competition from four new wide releases to remain the most popular film in North America. Its star Russell Brand almost claimed second place with his comedy remake Arthur, but instead settled for third in a tight race. The frame's other debuting titles had mixed results with the teen girl-led films Hanna and Soul Surfer faring well while the raunchy fantasy comedy Your Highness failed to make much of a splash. As usual, the overall box office was down by double digits compared to last year.
          Dropping a reasonable 43% in its second turn with moviegoers, Hop grossed $21.3M boosting its ten-day total to a healthy $67.8M. The Universal release cost only $63M to make so the studio has a solid moneymaker on its hands that could possibly find its way to $120-130M from North America alone. So far the animation/live-action hybrid is following the same path as Johnny Depp's Rango from early March. After a similar $38.1M debut, the lizard toon declined by 41% putting its ten-day tally at $68.2M. Rango now sits at $117.5M after its sixth session on its way to $120M+. Hop follows an eleven-week streak of new films opening at number one each frame.
          Focus landed in second with a commendable performance from its new action title Hanna which debuted to $12.4M from 2,535 playdates. The PG-13 espionage thriller averaged $4,880 and was the only action film in the top five. Starring Saoirse Ronan, Eric Bana, and Cate Blanchett, the pic earned strong reviews from critics which helped it appeal to upscale adult audiences looking for something without talking bunnies or bumbling drunks. Few films are anchored by a teen girl assassin so the fresh feel and the strong marketing push helped Hanna stand out as an option paying top dollar for.
         Russell Brand's Arthur remake finished in third place for the weekend and grossed $12.2M. The PG-13 redo of the 1981 Dudley Moore hit averaged a lackluster $3,731 per theater from 3,276 locations. Slammed by critics, the Warner Bros. release was meant to bring the story of a rich lovable drunk playboy to a younger audience by using the British comic as the anchor. But unfunny trailers and Brand's not-so-sizable box office power led Arthur to a disappointing debut as moviegoers stayed away for the most part. The actor's only other lead role in a film came in last summer's Get Him To The Greek which carried an R rating and bowed to a better $17.6M on its way to $61M. Arthur co-starred Helen Mirren and Jennifer Garner who also failed to contribute commercial muscle. Though it ranked second overall, the comedy placed fifth in the top ten when comparing per-theater averages. The reported production budget was $40M with a hefty marketing tab added on top of that.
          The inspirational family drama Soul Surfer exceeded expectations and debuted in fourth with $10.6M. The PG-rated true story of a teen surfer who gets her life back on track after a shark bites off her arm averaged a good $4,789 from 2,214 sites. Sony's TriStar unit handled distribution while FilmDistrict took marketing duties. Starring AnnaSophia Robb, Dennis Quaid, Helen Hunt, and superstar singer Carrie Underwood in her film debut, Soul earned mixed reviews from critics. Moms and daughters made up a big portion of the audience. Exit polls showed that a whopping 80% of the crowd was female and 56% was under 25. Soul Surfer earned an A+ grade from CinemaScore which is rare these days so word-of-mouth should allow the pic to play well for the rest of the spring season especially with the Easter holiday still to come.
          The horror film Insidious posted a shockingly low second weekend decline of only 29% and ranked fifth with $9.4M in ticket sales. Fright films routinely lose over half of their opening weekend take in the sophomore frame so this result is indeed rare. With a solid $26.7M in its first ten days, rookie distributor FilmDistrict's first release could find its way to an impressive $50M or more. With Insidious, four of the top five films had one-word titles.
          Faring worst among the weekend's four new wide releases was Universal's fantasy comedy Your Highness which bowed to $9.4M from 2,769 locations for a dull $3,380 average. The R-rated action laugher starring Danny McBride, James Franco, and Natalie Portman tried to attract older teens and young adults by mixing an effects-driven Medieval quest with crude sexual humor but failed to impress. The $50M production skewed towards young men with 58% of the audience being male and 55% being 25 and older. A weak C+ CinemaScore and horrible reviews indicate a fast fade in the weeks ahead. Saturday sales dropped 9% while all other new releases - even rival comedy Arthur - enjoyed increases.
          The sci-fi thriller Source Code dropped 42% in its second weekend to $8.7M. Holding up well despite plenty of competition, the Summit release has grossed $28.2M in ten days and looks headed for a $50M finish. Relativity's action pic Limitless fell by a similar 41% to $5.5M boosting the impressive cume to $64.1M.
          The kidpic Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules tumbled 53% to $4.8M giving Fox $45.3M to date. Lionsgate's The Lincoln Lawyer enjoyed another moderate drop with $4.3M, off only 37%, for a $46.1M sum rounding out the top ten.
          New films in limited release did not fare very well over the weekend. The IMAX 3D animal documentary Born To Be Wild debuted in 206 locations and took in $856,133 for a mild $4,156 average per site. The G-rated pic about orangutans and elephants was narrated by Morgan Freeman. Running only 40 minutes in length, Born played to regular ticket prices despite being an IMAX 3D presentation. Many exhibitors were able to squeeze in seven or eight showtimes per day meaning each showing attracted just 20-25 people. Reviews were terrific across the board. Lionsgate released the Spanish-language romantic comedy No Eres Tu, Soy Yo (It's Not You, It's Me) in 226 theaters but averaged a weak $2,606 with its $588,938 take.
          The top ten films grossed $98.4M which was down 16% from last year when Clash of the Titans remained in the top spot with $26.6M; and off 19% from 2009 when Hannah Montana The Movie debuted at number one with $32.3M.

# Title Apr 8 - 10


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 Hop $ 21,298,240


2
$ 67,754,545 Universal
2 Hanna 12,370,549


1
12,370,549 Focus
3 Arthur 12,222,756


1
12,222,756 Warner Bros.
4 Soul Surfer 10,601,862


1
10,601,862 Sony
5 Insidious 9,371,769


2
26,728,357 FilmDistrict
6 Your Highness 9,360,020


1
9,360,020 Universal
7 Source Code 8,650,238


2
28,218,871 Summit
8 Limitless 5,461,378


4
64,149,608 Relativity
9 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 4,770,987


3
45,348,247 Fox
10 The Lincoln Lawyer 4,281,598


4
46,136,408 Lionsgate










11 Rango 2,301,507


6
117,532,400 Paramount
12 Sucker Punch 2,102,082


3
33,973,736 Warner Bros.
13 Red Riding Hood 1,776,234


4
35,592,341 Warner Bros.
14 Paul 1,742,340


4
35,078,290 Universal
15 Battle: Los Angeles 1,528,411


5
81,228,788 Sony
16 Jane Eyre 1,157,935


4
5,146,695 Focus
17 Win Win 1,150,180


3
3,434,825 Fox Searchlight
18 The Adjustment Bureau 876,960


5
60,108,660 Universal
19 Born To Be Wild 856,133


1
856,133 Warner Bros.
20 No Eres Tu, Soy Yo 588,938


1
588,938 Lionsgate