BOX OFFICE 6/28-6/30: 'Monsters' Tops Again; Bullock and McCarthy Bring the Heat

In new releases this weekend The Heat scored a terrific $40 million, the biggest opening of either Sandra Bullock or Melissa McCarthy's career. The buddy cop movie received an "A-" from crowds and of course played 67% female- seeing as Sandra Bullock's movies have consistently had strong legs, the ultimate gross for this one could be as high as $200 million, depending on next week's drop (and it's the 4th of July with no other female targeted movies out there, so I doubt it's in for a hefty fall). White House Down, on the other hand, only came up with $26 million, which is pretty much a flop, considering it cost $190 million to produce. Unless it holds really strong (which is possible with another A- Cinemascore from audiences) or is saved by overseas numbers, it'll likely end up in the red. The studio is blaming the release of the nearly identical film from two months ago, Olympus Has Fallen, for stealing its thunder, but hey, whose decision was it to move WHD from a November release to June anyway?

TOP 5  

  1. Monsters University- 44.5 million
  2. The Heat- $40 million
  3. World War Z- $29. 2 million
  4. White House Down- $26 million
  5. Man of Steel- $20.5 million

As for the holdovers, WWZ dropped less than 50% from last week (which may also account for some of WHD's underwhelming performance- too many male targeted action flicks on the market at once) , and Monsters U held on strong enough for #1 a second time. Next up, it's the long 4th of July weekend, where it's just The Lone Ranger set to square off against Despicable Me 2, which leaves a lot of room for the holdovers to keep dominating.

2013 Saturn Awards

The 39th annual Saturn Awards were held last night, where trophies were handed out by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films. Naturally, their top honors go to the movies that get nowhere near the Oscars (the exception being Life of Pi), which is kind of refreshing to see. Check out the TV Home Page to see what they liked in TV this past year as well.

FILM AWARDS

Best Science Fiction Film: The Avengers

Best Fantasy Film: Life of Pi

Best Horror/Thriller Film: The Cabin in the Woods

Best Action/Adventure Film: Skyfall

Best Actor: Matthew McConaughey (Killer Joe

Best Actress: Jennifer Lawrence (The Hunger Games

Best Supporting Actor: Clark Gregg (The Avengers

Best Supporting Actress: Anne Hathaway (The Dark Knight Rises

Best Young Actor: Suraj Sharma (Life of Pi

Best Director: Joss Whedon (The Avengers

Forbes' Most Powerful Actors

According to Forbes, the top earning actor and actress in Hollywood are Hugh Jackman and Angelina Jolie. 

 

TOP 10 ACTORS: 

  1. Hugh Jackman
  2. Robert Downey, Jr. 
  3. Leonardo Dicaprio
  4. Channing Tatum
  5. Dwayne Johnson
  6. Tom Cruise
  7. Mark Wahlberg
  8. Will Smith
  9. Ben Affleck
  10. Adam Sandler

TOP 10 ACTRESSES

  1. Angelina Jolie
  2. Jennifer Lawrence
  3. Jennifer Aniston
  4. Kristen Stewart
  5. Gwyneth Paltrow
  6. Meryl Streep
  7. Emma Stone
  8. Charlize Theron
  9. Mila Kunis
  10. Sandra Bullock

Surprised Brad Pitt isn't on the guy's list, but it mostly reads like the popularity contest it always is- a who's who of who's hot right now.

BOX OFFICE 6/21-6/23: Monsters Dominate

The two big new releases this week did extraordinarily well, with Pixar's Monsters University scoring $82 million to mark the studio's 14th straight box office topper and their second biggest debut ever, behind just Toy Story 3. The family film should continue to play well with a lack of competition, as it earned an "A" Cinemascore and played 60% under 25 years old. The big surprise was second place though, as the famously troubled production of World War Z had zero effect on its earning power, hauling in a hugely unexpected $66 million. It was helped by decent reviews (71% Rotten Tomatoes) and Brad Pitt's star power, as the film played to 51% women, which is nearly unheard of for an action zombie flick. In fact, it's the biggest opening of Brad Pitt's career, passing Mr. and Mrs. Smith's $50 million bow in 2005.

Top 5:

  1. Monsters University- $82 million
  2. World War Z- $66 million
  3. Man of Steel- $41.2 million
  4. This is the End- $13 million
  5. Now You See Me- $7.9 million

In the holdovers, Man of Steel fell a pretty steep 65% since last week but already has $210 million total and should still cross $300 million. Up next week is The Heat, the buddy-cop comedy with Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy, and White House Down, aka Die Hard in the White House, with Channing Tatum and Jamie Foxx.

Movie News Nuggets

  • Marvel.com announced today that Robert Downey, Jr. has signed on to appear in Avengers 2 (May 1, 2015) and Avengers 3  (TBD), but nothing on Iron Man 4. I cannot even imagine the amount they forked over to get him to do this, but it looks like what's now become his signature role will be continuing until at least 2018, ten years after the first Iron Man movie. He must be getting tired of this, right? Remember when he did mostly arthouse films and passion projects? Much as I like Tony Stark, I'd sure love to see a return to that RDJ someday.
  • In other superhero news, fans are reeling from the sudden "letting go" of Shailene Woodley from The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Having already filmed scenes as Mary-Jane and been the focus of some of the first set pics released, it was revealed just the other day that she's been cut from the film altogether. The latest is that Sony is reportedly now looking for a new actress to replace her for the third movie, citing Woodley's likely unavailability due to her upcoming sci-fi movie Divergent. Hmmm. Rumors are of course swirling about possible real reasons for the shake-up, and it certainly seems as if Sony is using the Divergent film as an excuse to get rid of her. Unhappiness with the performance, perhaps?
  • Finally, several highly anticipated release dates have been confirmed by Fox, including Dawn of the Planet of the Apes for July 15, 2014 (can't wait!), X-Men: Days of Future Past for May 23, 2014, and most surprisingly, Independence Day 2 on July 3, 2015. Even as somebody who considers the original a cheesy guilty pleasure, was anyone really calling for a sequel to Independence Day almost twenty years after the fact? Anyway, with that plus Avengers 2 and Star Wars: Episode VII set for 2015, that is going to be one mega summer movie season, isn't it?