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-   -   Weekend Box Office (Jan 6th - Jan 8th) Thread (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/movie-talk/451337-weekend-box-office-jan-6th-jan-8th-thread.html)

RichC2 01-07-06 12:48 PM

Weekend Box Office (Jan 6th - Jan 8th) Thread
 
To, you know, discuss the weekend's BO numbers.

For Friday (taken from LeesMovieInfo.com):

1 Hostel 7.550 NEW 2195 3,440 7.55
2 Chronicles of Narnia 3.985 -58% 3514 1,134 236.36
3 Dick and Jane 3.760 -38% 3182 1,182 73.17
4 King Kong 3.445 -60% 3480 990 183.67
5 Cheaper...Dozen 2 2.319 -58% 3108 746 60.22
6 Munich 2.275 49% 1485 1,532 20.04
7 Rumor Has It 1.821 -43% 2766 658 31.36
8 Memoirs of a Geisha 1.810 -34% 1589 1,139 35.58
9 Brokeback Mountain 1.746 - 484 3,607 18.45
10 The Ringer 1.499 -38% 1688 888 24.93

Amazing ranking for Bloodrayne, all things considered. The original theater count was listed at 2,000... wound up being released in 985. Smart move by whoever decided that.

...and now back to my Now and Then, Here and There marathon.

fumanstan 01-07-06 12:57 PM

I'm surprised at Hostel's take.

Mountain Biker 01-07-06 12:59 PM

With all the hype, I'm not.

RichC2 01-07-06 01:01 PM

I saw a trailer for Hostel before Saw II and thought it was one of those "Please Shut Off Your Cell Phone" ads due to the way it was presented. Then realized what it was a minute later.

I honestly haven't seen a single TV ad for this movie, which is odd but then I don't get Viacom channels, which I'm guessing it was advertised on the most.

scott shelton 01-07-06 01:05 PM

I enjoyed dinner with friends last night, and when talk came to movies, they all expressed a great desire to see "Quentin Tarantino's new movie."

That might explain part of HOSTEL's nice take. We'll see if it holds for the weekend.

scott shelton 01-07-06 01:14 PM

FilmJerk.com has received word that a number of prints for Romar's initial release, Uwe Boll's "BloodRayne," have been misdelivered to theatres not booked with the film, if prints have even been delivered at all. One theatre employee says their print of "BloodRayne" was originally shown as being cancelled by the company handling print delivery for Romar, before being located in the delivery company's system. The theatre will now get their print of "BloodRayne" sometime Saturday morning, wiping out the all important opening day ticket and concession sales.

The problems, according to another source at a major exhibitor, may be that Romar, helping to keep their costs down, has only one person handling distribution. As a former employee of a independent distribution company and has friends who work distribution at major studios, I know firsthand you need more than a single individual working in distribution. There is a reason why every major company that handles wide theatrical releases has their own distribution division, filled with dozens of people who work specific zones all across the nation, making sure any problems are handled quickly and effeciently.

However, after speaking with James Schramm, the very affable CEO of Romar, he assures me that while there were some problems with print misdelivery (a few theatres that were once tentatively booked with the film received prints they should not have), those instances were quite minor and that the "BloodRayne" release has gone off incredibly well. Mr. Schramm told me by phone that Romar has almost two dozen people working distribution, and will be adding ten more by the end of 2006. He also states one of those new people will be a highly respected industry veteran with more than twenty years experience at a major studio, whose appointment will be announced in the coming weeks.

Schramm confirmed for me that Romar is quite stabile, and they already have fifteen films scheduled for wide release over the next three years, including Uwe Boll's next film, "Dungeon Siege," set for a December bow. "We're not going anywhere," Schramm said. This is good to hear, because what they are offering could lead to a re-emergence of truly independent cinema unseen since the last great independent distribution age of the 1980s.

www.filmjerk.com

RichC2 01-07-06 01:17 PM


Schramm confirmed for me that Romar is quite stabile, and they already have fifteen films scheduled for wide release over the next three years, including Uwe Boll's next film, "Dungeon Siege," set for a December bow. "We're not going anywhere," Schramm said. This is good to hear, because what they are offering could lead to a re-emergence of truly independent cinema unseen since the last great independent distribution age of the 1980s.
That made me chuckle.

scott shelton 01-07-06 02:23 PM

And from the Friday "ouch!" file...

GRANDMA'S BOY $1,100,000
BLOODRAYNE $450,000

William Fuld 01-07-06 02:27 PM

Doris Roberts is box office poison.

TomOpus 01-07-06 03:51 PM


Originally Posted by RichC2
I honestly haven't seen a single TV ad for this movie, which is odd but then I don't get Viacom channels, which I'm guessing it was advertised on the most.

Same here... nothing at all. I'm curious where people have seen TV ads.

j_sutton 01-07-06 04:01 PM

Comedy Central has been showing Hostel ads non-stop in the evenings. I believe FX has too, but not 100% on that one.

ChrisKnudsen 01-07-06 04:32 PM

Looks like Brokeback will once again have the highest per screen average.

Joe Molotov 01-07-06 05:06 PM

I saw some ads for Hostel on G4, and I rarely watch G4. They also interviewed Eli Roth on Attack of the Show.

Artman 01-07-06 06:27 PM


Originally Posted by ChrisKnudsen
Looks like Brokeback will once again have the highest per screen average.

Makes sense since it's in the fewest theaters. :)

movielib 01-07-06 07:31 PM


Originally Posted by ChrisKnudsen
Looks like Brokeback will once again have the highest per screen average.

It finally opened in Madison and is playing on only two screens at one of the least nice theaters in town (no stadium seating, less than great sound system). It's selling out every showing and my wife and I had to buy tickets for the showing after the one we had come for.

Great film, probably my choice for Best Picture.

Howiefan 01-07-06 08:31 PM


Originally Posted by Artman
Makes sense since it's in the fewest theaters. :)

That doesn't mean anything... tons of movies open in few theaters and barely make any money...

Mr. Cinema 01-07-06 08:36 PM

They didn't list Match Point yet. It averaged $66,179 on 8 screens last weekend...

Coral 01-07-06 08:57 PM

So the whole "Kong will pick up after Christmas and it will have legs" argument is lost. Looks like Kong turned out to be a dissapointment for Universal.

GuessWho 01-07-06 09:15 PM

Do you really need surround sound for Brokeback Mountain? :confused:

Joe Molotov 01-07-06 09:45 PM


Originally Posted by Coral
So the whole "Kong will pick up after Christmas and it will have legs" argument is lost. Looks like Kong turned out to be a dissapointment for Universal.

It did about as well as anyone expected it to after those first few weeks, which is that it will make over $200 Million in the US, and probably around $500 Million worldwide. I think they'll be able to keep the electicity on over at Universal.

scott shelton 01-07-06 10:25 PM


Originally Posted by Joe Molotov
I think they'll be able to keep the electicity on over at Universal.

Maybe so, but that still doesn't make Universal thrilled with these returns.

With the budget and profit deals they made... KONG just ain't producing the ape love as was expected.

Patman 01-07-06 10:30 PM

I surmised, after viewing KK, that KK's legs would be short and hairy at the box office (due to running time, a bloated screenplay which overstayed its welcome by about an hour). It just wasn't conducive to repeat viewing, plus these days of shorter DVD release window doesn't offer any additional incentive to get off your butt to go see it at the movie theaters.

DRG 01-07-06 10:44 PM

Not shocked that Hostel is number one, but I'm a bit surprised that Kong fell behind Fun with Dick & Jane. How is it THAT movie is having legs? I'm hearing no real-life buzz about it one way or another.

Patman 01-07-06 11:18 PM

Fun with Dick and Jane has a story that people can relate to (corporate greed soaking regular employees pension funds, etc.), and I would guess the word of mouth is making this point so that other people then go see it.

scott shelton 01-08-06 12:16 PM

Full Report

1) Hostel $20,100,000

2) The Chronicles of Narnia $15,427,000
$247,561,000

3) King Kong $12,466,000
$192,522,000

4) Fun with Dick and Jane $12,200,000
$81,359,000

5) Cheaper by the Dozen 2 $8,300,000
$66,421,000

6) Munich $7,455,000
$25,239,000

7) Memoirs of a Geisha $6,000,000
$39,751,000

8) Rumor Has It $5,881,000
$35,370,000

9) Brokeback Mountain $5,750,000
$22,460,000

10) The Family Stone $4,625,000
$53,193,000


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