Strong holiday box office performance gave Hollywood a year-end gift among
stockings full of coal caused by the lingering writers' strike, with ticket
sales up nearly 18 percent in the last weekend of 2007 over a year earlier.
The top-selling 12 films are estimated to take in US$169 million this weekend
at movie theaters in the United States and Canada, according to preliminary
figures released by box office tracking firm Media By Numbers yesterday.
Hollywood has seen three "up" weekends in a row this month after five weeks
of declining business in the sluggish fall season.
Number one at the North American box office this weekend is "National
Treasure: Book of Secrets," a Disney release selling US$35.6 million this
weekend. That Nicolas Cage film has taken in US$124 million over two weeks.
The computer-animated "Alvin and the Chipmunks" jumped on spot to number two,
with an estimated US$30 million in ticket sales this weekend. It was in third
place last weekend, and has sold an estimated US$142.3 million over three weeks.
Meanwhile, "I Am Legend," the Will Smith sci-fi movie slipped to third place
with US$27.5 million this weekend and US$194.6 million taken in during its three
weeks of release.
Political comedy "Charlie Wilson's War," starring Tom Hanks and Julia
Roberts, held steady at number 4 with US$11.8 million over its second weekend of
release, followed by Oscar favorite "Juno" with US$10.3 million, as the comedy
about a pregnant teenager schoolgirl expanded its release.
Hollywood will likely finish the year of 2007 with record domestic box office
revenues of about US$9.7 billion, surpassing the previous high of US$9.45
billion in 2004, mainly thanks to the rising ticket prices, according to Media
By Numbers.