Zombieland did even better than my bullish projection, evidence that the time of the horror comedy has come.
#1 movie predicted correctly: 1 Week In A Row
Only alert commenters Nick and John joined in picking Zombieland. The final tally on the most recent R Rated films goes: Inglourious, Final Destination, and Zombieland with wins. Jennifer's Body and Sorority Row with losses. No real lessons there.
Result: 25.0 million (My rank: #1, $3.7m off)
Zombieland also took the per theater average crown, leaving the smallest dip consolation for Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. It's now in the top ten of 3-D all time, passing Beowulf this weekend.
Result: 16.7 million (My rank: #2, $1.2m off)
As per normal, Pixar defies the rules. They release films with no real talking (Wall-E), with an older fella hero (Up) and then they conquer the re-release demons. I thought the three hour running time would hurt them; with this level of demand I wonder if they could have split them up and made even more money?
Result: 12.5 million (My rank: #6, $5.6m off)
The budget was only $18.5m, so they aren't that doomed just yet. The bad news is that the word of mouth is probably going to slay them.
Result: 7.3 million (My rank: #4, $0.3m off)
You won't see it reported anywhere, but this is still over $100m away from making a dollar. It's looking a bit like a money laundering scheme.
Result: 7.3 million (My rank: #5, $0.3m off)
Next week will be the the tell-tale sign on this film. Will the early adopters be able to convince folks it's a fairly scathing indictment of all political parties? Or will middle America stay away because of the Michael Moore involvement?
Result: 4.85 million (My rank: #7, $1.85m off)
I figured Ellen Page and Drew Barrymore might have a little box office heat. I was wrong.
Result: 4.85 million (My rank: #3, $2.85m off)
It somehow gained 37 theaters this weekend, and to answer Steve''s question, getting distribution in theaters is a purely financial equation. Opening in 2,000 theaters will cost you around $6m in distribution fees, film reels, and marketing within each market, so you've got to believe your film has a shot at at least $20m over its production budget to justify the cost of releasing wide. Otherwise you shoot for DVD.
I should note that this equation is for smaller budget films. Once you crack the $100m level of production budget you've got to spend monstrous amounts of marketing cash to get awareness up, so that $6m isn't nearly enough.
Result: 4.7 million (My rank: #8, $0.2m off)
Trivia: it was only the second weekend of the year the top 12 films grossed in the $90m – $99m range.
Result: 3.8 million (My rank: #9, $0.5m off)
Six of the films in the top ten (including Love Happens) have production budgets listed under $25m. The fall pre-Oscar/holiday season is all about castaways and hedging your bets, eh?
Result: 2.7 million (My rank: #10, $0.1m off)
How say you? Surprised the horror comedy is a legitimate genre now? A little taken aback Drew Barrymore's directorial debut didn't thrive? More interested in Toy Story 3-D now? Comment early, comment often.