Movie crowds kept up their holiday spirit as Reese Witherspoon and Vince
Vaughn's comedy "Four Christmases" rang up US$18.2 million to lead the box
office for a second-straight weekend.
The Warner Bros. flick raised its 12-day total to US$70.8 million, according
to studio estimates Sunday.
'Four Christmases' was set up perfectly. It's an evergreen subject for the
holiday period," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box office tracker Media
By Numbers. "This is a movie that can play and is playing from Thanksgiving
through the end of the year."
Despite the economic downturn, Hollywood continued to outperform last year's
holiday season, with revenues up for the fifth weekend in a row.
The top 12 movies took in US$77.5 million, a 6 percent increase from the same
weekend in 2007, when "The Golden Compass" opened at No. 1 with US$25.8 million.
Revenues for the year are at US$8.7 billion, slightly ahead of the pace last
year, when Hollywood ended up with record receipts of US$9.7 billion. However,
that reflects higher ticket prices, because actual attendance is down 4 percent,
according to Media By Numbers.
Only one new movie opened in full wide release, Lionsgate's action tale
"Punisher: War Zone," which delivered a weak No. 8 debut with US$4 million.
Based on Marvel Comics' "The Punisher," the movie stars Ray Stevenson in the
title role as a vigilante hero going up against a crime boss.
In narrower release, Sony's music saga "Cadillac Records" opened solidly with
US$3.5 million to come in at No. 9. The film features Adrien Brody, Beyonce
Knowles, Jeffrey Wright, Cedric the Entertainer and Mos Def in the story of
legendary blues label Chess Records.
Ron Howard's drama "Frost/Nixon" had a huge debut in limited release, taking
in US$180,147 in just three theaters, averaging a whopping US$60,049 a cinema.
That compares to a US$5,451 average in 3,335 theaters for "Four Christmases."
A likely contender for a best-picture nomination at the Academy Awards, the
Universal Pictures film stars Frank Langella as former President Richard Nixon
and Michael Sheen as TV personality David Frost in the story of their momentous
1977 interviews.
"Frost/Nixon" expands to more theaters over the next two weeks.
Sony's James Bond sequel "Quantum of Solace" took in US$6.6 million to raise
its domestic total to US$151.5 million. The film topped the US$500 million mark
worldwide.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at US and Canadian theaters,
according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released yesterday.
1. "Four Christmases," US$18.2 million.
2. "Twilight," US$13.2 million.
3. "Bolt," US$9.7 million.
4. "Australia," US$7 million.
5. "Quantum of Solace," US$6.6 million.
6. "Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa," US$5.1 million.
7. "Transporter 3," US$4.5 million.
8. "Punisher: War Zone," US$4 million.
9. "Cadillac Records," US$3.5 million.
10. "Role Models," US$2.6 million.