And the winner is… Final Destination's big 3-D opening. Alert commenter Athar was a cume $2.4m off – so I think he's getting the prize (though you can feel free to check my math, it's early, and the coffee is still brewing). I was pleased to see Inglourious Basterds fell less than 50 percent. The people have spoken, and they like Tarantino's style. Let's break it down.
#1 movie predicted correctly: 5 Weeks In A Row
Wowsers. Clearly the 3-D helped, it's already in the top 20 of overall 3-D cume, though 17 of the top 20 have come in this decade. The fascinating thing to see here will be the bleed off. Can it possibly hold off the all but certain "60 percent" second weekend horror dip?
Result: 28.3 million (My rank: #1, $9m off)
Most of us had Basterds falling below $20m, but clearly it has a bit of staying power. It's already cracked $100m worldwide cume, you'd have to think Kill Bill Vol. 1's $181m is attainable. However, the production budget was $70m, so it could end up being merely a stay of execution for The Weinstein Company.
Result: 20.0 million (My rank: #3, $2.8m off)
It almost doesn't matter what it makes because the formula remains: $50m domestically and then a couple million DVDs. They keep the budget low (sheep's blood is cheap) and then rinse and repeat. The real question is why no one ever tries anything innovative within the genre. It's all sequels, remakes, and re-imaginings. What about an original story with a touch of crossover appeal? Just throwing ideas out here.
Result: 17.4 million (My rank: #2, $.1m off)
It will be interesting to see Peter Jackson pivot to Lovely Bones publicity in a few weeks. All of a sudden the Lord of the Rings and cool-aliens-guy is going to be talking about spirits and grief. I'm not saying it won't work – I'm just saying you have to appreciate his range.
Result: 10.7 million (My rank: #4, $0.6m off)
$250m worldwide. But Paramount is learning a hard lesson about shooting for the under 25 male audience. It doesn't always translate into anything more than them.
Result: 8.0 million (My rank: #6, $1.6m off)
It was in 7th Friday night but it made up a little ground on Time Traveler's Wife. Still, at only $65m on a budget of $40m they are going to need a big Academy Award push out of Streep to recoup on DVD.
Result: 7.4 million (My rank: #, $m off)
My seven call was Taking Woodstock. Similar math to Julie & Julia here: $50m in tickets sold on a near $40m budget. Ever wonder why there's not much in the way of counterprogramming? Look at #6 and #7 and then put yourself inside a studio exec's suit.
Result: 6.7 million (My rank: #8, $1.2m off)
Has anyone seen a budget on this title? Because it has been a disaster financially.
Result: 4.8 million (My rank: #9, $1.7m off)
It's only at 50 percent on Rotten Tomatoes – it's hard to figure where the audience was going to come from here. Didn't have the theaters or the buzz, clearly Ang Lee's appearance on Colbert wasn't nearly enough.
Result: 3.7 million (My rank: #, $m off)
Toldja! Sorry, went all Finke on you for a moment there.
Result: 2.8 million (My rank: #10, $0.2m off)
So what did we learn this weekend? That people are warming to Tarantino? That FD3 had a better reputation than the 2007 version of Halloween? That we can expect cheap horrors and occasional Streep-led Oscar programming? Discuss and enlighten, your comments are always welcome.