April 20-22 Weekend Actuals
1. Think Like A Man (Screen Gems/Sony) NEW [2,015 Theaters] PG13
Friday $12.1M, Saturday $13.2M, Sunday $8.3M, Weekend $33.6M2. The Lucky One (Warner Bros) NEW [3,155 Theaters] PG13
Friday $9.1M, Saturday $8.6M, Sunday $4.9M, Weekend $22.5M3. The Hunger Games (Lionsgate) Week 5 [3,752 Theaters] PG13
Friday $4.0M, Saturday $6.5M, Sunday $4.2M, Weekend $14.7M, Cume $357.1M4. Chimpanzee (DisneyNature) NEW [1,563 Theaters] G
Friday $3.5M, Saturday $3.7M, Sunday $3.4M, Weekend $10.7M5. The Three Stooges (Fox) Week 2 [3,482 Theater] PG
Friday $2.3M, Saturday $4.3M, Sunday $3.1M, Weekend $9.8M (-43%), Cume $29.9M6. The Cabin In The Woods (Lionsgate) Week 2 [2,811 Theaters] R
Friday $2.5M, Saturday $3.4M, Sunday $2.2M, Weekend $8M (-46%), Cume $27.2M7. American Reunion (Universal) Week 3 [3,033 Theaters] R
Friday $1.7M, Saturday $2.3M, Sunday $1.5M, Weekend $5.5M (-48%), Cume $48.5M8. Titanic 3D (Paramount/Fox) Week 3 [2,515 Theaters] PG13
Friday $1.4M, Saturday $2.2M, Sunday $1.5M, Weekend $5.0M (-58%), Cume $52.9M9. 21 Jump Street (Sony) Week 6 [2,427 Theaters] R
Friday $1.4M, Saturday $2.1M, Sunday $1.3M, Weekend $4.8M (-28%), Cume $127.2M10. Mirror Mirror (Relativity) Week 4 [2,938 Theaters] PG
Friday $1.1M, Saturday $1.9M, Sunday $1.3M, Weekend $4.4M (-36%), Cume $55.5M
SUNDAY AM, 4TH UPDATE: I’m still on vacation but the box office never rests, especially when 2012 delivers another hot weekend. Sony Pictures is in shock that its Screen Gems sleeper Think Like A Man based on the
bestselling book by TV/radio comedian Steve Harvey and starring new comedy star Kevin Hart is North America’s #1 movie. But also by its gross through Sunday looking like double what execs predicted. And Saturday’s number was up +9% from Friday’s figure. The weekend total may finish as high as $33M. And yet this urban comedy — like it or not, that’s what the movie industry calls this genre — was playing in only 2,017 locations. It was aimed squarely at African-Americans ages 13 to 49 but then wound up crossing over big-time with all audiences regardless of race and sex. Opening weekend demos show that the campaign attracted an audience mix of 37% males and 63% females: 38% were under 30, and 62% were 30 and over. Pic earned an ‘A’ CinemaScore from audiences: ‘A+’ Males, ‘A’ Females, ‘A+’ under age 25, ‘A’ every other category. Big online ticket seller Fandango called this contest early when it reported that Think Like A Man was its top-selling movie grabbing a healthy 42% of Thursday’s sales. “The movie had a negative cost between $12M-$13M so we’re thrilled,” a Sony exec emails me. “Any weekend where you make back the negative cost in the first weekend is a good weekend in our books.”
I’m amused how everybody is getting in line now to tell me all the execs and talent responsible for the huge success of this movie. But, first, let’s not forget that Jeff Blake’s ace marketing and distribution team can sell virtually anything. And no doubt Clint Culpepper is on a hot streak: this is Screen Gems’ third #1 film of the year, and Sony Pictures’ fourth #1 in 2012. Besides Harvey, comedian Kevin Hart deserve credit for turning out his rabid fanbase by endlessly promoting the pic and dominating the social media conversation about it. Hart is still a fairly fresh film star: his 2011 standup comedy film Laugh At My Pain shocked the industry by making Top 10 numbers despite playing in very few theaters. Harvey’s and Hart’s and the cast’s popularity allowed Sony to take advantage of some 40+M social connections on Facebook and Twitter. And then there’s Tim Story (Barbershop, Fantastic Four 1 and 2) who directed the film. “How many prominent African American film comedy directors are there after all who have helmed a mainstream breakout hit?” one insider gushed to me. And then there’s African American producer Will Packer, whose small budget-big rewards hits include Takers, Obsessed, and Stomp The Yard. Besides Harvey, screenwriting credit went to David A. Newman and Keith Merryman.
Knowing that the story skewed towards women, the studio’s marketing strived to position the movie from a male point of view while not turning off the female audience. The trailer debuted with New Year’s Eve, and it also ran with The Vow, Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds, and Red Tails. The usual high-profile sports games were employed, as well as a ’Behind The NBA’ promotion featuring Kevin Hart, Charles Barkley, Ernie Johnson, and Kevin Smith. The film took advantage of a lot of radio cross-promotion, including screening programs and flyaway promotions. It also took over Harvey’s morning show during the first week of April with the actresses on one day, and the actors the following day. Sony also reached out to radio DJs from top urban markets, inviting them to the press junket and hosting a special cast dinner with the biggest African American bloggers and websites. Studio also had a big presence on the campuses of historically black colleges and universities, and hosted special fraternity screenings in select markets. Other urban media outlets across TV, radio, print, and outdoor were saturated by Sony. BET created full blocks of programming dedicated to Think Like A Man, and all special programming attracting African American viewers were utilized including the BET Honors, the NAACP Image Awards, and America’s Next Top Model.
Warner Bros’ romantic drama from star author Nicholas Sparks (The Notebook, Dear John), The Lucky One starring Zac Efron is looking like $8.9M Saturday — about even with Friday – for a $22.8M weekend. This is another wild overperformer because the studio only expected $15M through Sunday. Playing in 3,115 theaters, it received a ‘B+’ CinemaScore from audiences. Warner Bros’ private tracking saw this film was at the high end for a Sparks film, which all have a good multiple of approximately 4x. So the studio marketed the movie based on the well-developed fan base for both Sparks and Efron. (Though Zac’s box office appeal is going down as his age goes up.) The campaign targeted females both by leveraging Zac’s appeal and the novelist’s pedigree. “The heart of our online marketing campaign was leveraging the celebrity and likability of Zac Efron in advertising, publicity and social media, while additionally leveraging the various social networks surrounding Nicholas Sparks and his previous films,” a WB exec told me. The sell was heavily focused on romance, and included aspirational messages like “What if you were destined to fall in love with someone before you even met?” (I know: barf. But this crap works, obviously.)
Both films right now finished the weekend ahead of Lionsgate’s four-weekends-in-a-row winner The Hunger Games which was playing in 3,732 locations and came in #3. The mega-blockbuster racked up a new international cume of $215.8M and domestic cume of $356.9M for a new worldwide cume of $572.7M. This first installment of Suzanne Collins’ book/film trilogy now has broken into the Top 20 domestic grossing films of all time this weekend (ahead of Transformers: Dark Of The Moon and Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers).
And nice matinee numbers came in for DisneyNature’s Chimpanzee which received an ‘A’ CinemaScore from audiences. The label’s 4th documentary is looking like $10.2M for the weekend from 1,563 plays. (Who can resist that cute ape face?) That beats last year’s African Cats which opened at $6M and made $15.4M, while Oceans in 2010 opened with $6M and went on to $19.4M. Fact that the second day of Chimpanzee went up from opening day is a first for a Disneynature film. Studio claims the label “enables us to sustain the company’s longstanding commitment to conservation. Through donations tied to the first three Disneynature films, Disneynature has planted three million trees in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, established 40,000 acres of marine protected area in The Bahamas, and protected 65,000 acres of savanna in Kenya.” The label launched in April 2008 and keeps turning out high-grossing feature-length nature films. For this simian pic, Disneynature joined forces with the Jane Goodall Institute for a special ‘See Chimpanzee, Save Chimpanzees’ program. For every moviegoer who sees the pic during opening week, the label makes a donation to Goodall through the Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund to protect chimps.
More international numbers in the morning. For now Peter Berg’s military vs aliens actioner from Universal Pictures crossed the $100M milestone in its first 10 days of international release. Through this Sunday Battleship‘s first 12-day total should reach $126.7M. The pressure is on for the film to do well in the 50 territories where it’s now open — including China and Russia — because of its advance bad buzz and very expensive budget. (The studio claims the cost was $209M while outside sources say $250M.) Battleship doesn’t open in the U.S./Canada until May 18th because the studio set a strategy to open overseas first. It was the #1 opener in 16 territories this week bringing the film’s total Number One openings overseas to 37 in the last two weeks. It dominated the Russian box office with 78% of market share. In China, Battleship gave Universal its largest opening in history on Wednesday. Universal has 14 more territories to open.
Here’s the Top 10 based on Friday’s grosses:
1. Think Like A Man (Screen Gems/Sony) NEW [2,015 Theaters] PG13
Friday $12.2M, Saturday $13.2M, Weekend $33.3M
2. The Lucky One (Warner Bros) NEW [3,155 Theaters] PG13
Friday $9.1M, Saturday $8.5M, Weekend $22.8M
3. The Hunger Games (Lionsgate) Week 5 [3,752 Theaters] PG13
Friday $4.0M, Saturday $6.5M, Weekend $14.5M, Cume $356.9M
4. Chimpanzee (DisneyNature) NEW [1,563 Theaters] G
Friday $3.5M, Saturday $3.7M, Weekend $10.2M
5. The Three Stooges (Fox) Week 2 [3,482 Theater] PG
Friday $2.3M, Saturday $4.3M, Weekend $9.2M (-46%), Cume $29.3M
6. The Cabin In The Woods (Lionsgate) Week 2 [2,811 Theaters] R
Friday $2.4M, Saturday $3.3M, Weekend $7.7M (-47%), Cume $26.9M
7. American Reunion (Universal) Week 3 [3,033 Theaters] R
Friday $1.7M, Saturday $2.4M, Weekend $5.2M, Cume $48.2M
8. Titanic 3D (Paramount/Fox) Week 3 [2,515 Theaters] PG13
Friday $1.4M, Saturday $2.1M, Weekend $5.0M, Cume $52.8M
9. 21 Jump Street (Sony) Week 6 [2,427 Theaters] R
Friday $1.3M, Saturday $2.1M, Weekend $4.6M, Cume $127.0M
10. Mirror Mirror (Relativity) Week 4 [2,938 Theaters] PG
Friday $1.0M, Saturday $1.8M, Weekend $4.1M, Cume $55.2M
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.


A “surprising” number one finish for the weekend? Hardly. Anyone who didn’t expect “TLAM” to dominate the weekend just hasn’t been paying attention. Sony has been chortling for weeks on how amazing the film’s test scores were.
Better than expected opening for the Sparks/Efron chick-flick, and an OK bow for Disney’s monkey movie, I suppose.
So does everything (“Engagement,” “Pirates,” “Raven,” “Safe”) drop dead next weekend in advance of the $100-million-plus opening weekend of “The Avengers”?
Sorry for the wrong info, Kevin Hart has 3.7 million fans on twitter and 5 million on facebook. Loyal fans. Im one of them.
TLAM SURPRISING SLEEPER HIT? Somebody needs 2 refocus their focus groups. Best selling book from everybody likes Steve Harvey. Taraji P. Henson w/serious acting cred on the hottest new tv show this season who also has a HUGE fan base. Kevin Hart huge comedian HUGE fan base. Megan,Gabby,Mike,Regina fans are dying 2 see them on film good story line great looking stylish cast something 4 the ADULT film goer
Nicholas Sparks is emotional porn for women.
What would have been the mark of career suicide for any other actor/comedian, hosting “Family Feud” has caught fire for Steve Harvey. Everyone I know watches that show now. He has a new space in the realm of celebrity awareness and I bet a lot of the success of this movie has to do with more people knowing about who he is and what comically he stands for. Good for him.
Not sure why you are surprised. If you have been paying attention Steve Harvey’s book has been a best seller, he promoted the book everywhere from Oprah to his daily syndicated morning radio show (which is on in the top 40 African American markets).
I’m sure that this film will have generated some crossover business when the dust settles this weekend. I worked at a mid-major studio for eight years and it was frustrating to see them view the black market as non-existent when that myth is dis-proven time and time again.
My suggestion to SVP’s, DOD’s and CE’s is to open your minds a bit more, which isn’t suggesting that you go make the first black movie you find. At least take the scripts and the meetings and give filmmakers of color who want to tell stories to people of color a legit shot.
Who are you geniuses anyway ? The Lucky One did not have a big female star, it was all on Efron’s back, it did not open on Valentine’s Day and it had HUGE competition for the female audience– and it opened to 25! Give the guy some credit ! I went with my wife who is a Sparks fan and he was actually really good in the movie.
Thank you for being logical and not just blindly bashing.
Neither one really appealed to me so I had no desire to see either of them. If I were forced to see one or the other I would have to go with Think Like a Man though. I’ve always liked Steve Harvey, Meagan Goode is frickin’ hot and movies like The Lucky One make me physically ill.
I wasn’t even talking about Charlie st cloud. I was talking about this one, the lucky one that got smashed by critics. How could you not know zac was in new years eve? It was promoted as his movie, he was the one they sent on all the late and day time talk shows even all his fans were saying this is his movie, then It tanked and they said not his movie anymore. Funny how that works.
New Years Eve was not marketed as “Zac’s movie” Most people who saw it didn’t even know he was in it until they saw it. As previously mentioned, it was marketed as an ensemble cast. New Years Eve didn’t really flop. It was still #1 at the Box Office. Some people may think it was Efron’s vehicle because Efron, Pffeifer, and Seth Myers were the only people to get good performance reviews from the movie.
Tyler Perry is rushing his film into the market because of this film. He is scared and he should be. But I think it’s too late. The audience has turned on him, tired of his cross-dressing b.s. and offended by his bad acting when he tries to be a leading man.
Tyler was helping to promote this movie. On the radio and with his fan base. Get your facts straight before you like an idiot.
“Think Like a Man” will drop like a rock after this weekend. It’s a type of one-and-done movie for guys – adolescent humor, pretty girls who don’t understand men, and guys-needing-guy-time.
Keep telling yourself that. Sure some mega-budget movie will come along and move it down, but that’s what always happens during the summer season.
Geez, the success of a black-led film has brought out the truth in some people, now hasn’t it?
How did you like the product placement of ford’s new vehicle in Think Like A Man?
Hollywood will never learn. With the right movie in place…people will show up for a majority black cast (including SHOCK HORROR “Whites”) Its the theme of the movie, based upon a book that has found major cross over success with “white people”.
I for one am not shocked to see a $30M plus opening, and Im certain this movie will run for weeks! Steve Harvey has a huge following in the black/latin community and appeals to white and asian people as well. The Steve Harvey show was aimed at the African American audience, but there were prominent white and latino leads.
All I can do is shake my head. Hollywood and the dummy’s that work in this industry act like all black people come from the ghetto…and hold morals and values vastly different to their own.
Get it into your thick skulls. Inside everyone is the same, whether you like it or not!
AND the majority of black people admire Tyler Perry as a biz man…but HATE his terrible Madea movies
This is awesome. For a while it looked like Screen Gems was abandoning the black audience and urban films for more neverending adventures of Milla or Kate in latex. Frankly, neither is as hot as Megan Goode in this movie.
ever notice that whenever a movie not aimed at white men (i.e. featuring women or blacks) succeeds, it is always a “surprise?” surprise to who?
THREE STOOGES – We took our sons to see TTS last night and were prepared for a painful 90 minutes. So I’m happy to report that the 3 lead actors were terrific. It was a lot of fun and the adults (parents) in the audience laughed louder than all the kids. Bravo to the Farrelly Brothers – we hope to see Larry, Moe and Curley (Sean, Chris & Will) again soon. Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk…
No surprise that Three Stooges tanked at the box office. Just a stupid movie with sight gags throughout the film and having those numbskulls from Jersey Shore in this didn’t do the movie any favors either.
Not one single person in the entire country bought a ticket to this movie because Jerry Ferara is in it.
Boy, Lockout sure bombed. I didn’t think it would be so disastrous. Usually there’s a built in adolescent male audience that eats up films like that. I guess they’re saving their money for The Avengers.
Why is Think Like a Man being #1 a surprise? Hot actresses sell.n
The Stooges was cute, but fell short of the belly laughs I wanted. Love Will Sasso and he didn’t disappoint with a spot on performance. The revelation was Chris Diamantopoulos who was uncanny. I felt cheated by their taking out certain funny bits that were in the trailers, like the bikini bit. Apparently, they gave in to moral high ground who will never see the film anyway. Leave it to the Catholic Church to ruin a good gag. This is where the film faltered. They lost any edge and a lot of the Farrelly humor I was hoping for. Ironically, when they played closer to the original gags, it was funniest and most relevant. If they did ever go for a sequel, put the guys in the classic fish out of water scenario, like thumbing their nose at high society, or whatever. A good effort made with obvious affection but cut loose next time, bros, if there is a next time.
Isnt it! There is a lot of underestimation on who will spend there money to see what. Nothing about this is surprising
Just imagine if Hollywood was not so completed discriminating and prejudice. Most “white” films get the added box office numbers of Canada and would have also been on more screens across AmeriKKKa. Yeah, yeah, yeah – we all know the ‘it’s business’ EXCUSE from you behind the scenes hollywoodteurs. BUT the truth and proof is in the very consistent OVER PERFORMING box office numbers for Black films. Black films with some technical craft and promotion to them. I am NOT saying every film has to be Black but I am sick of seeing the same ol’ white people films and remake after remake and sequels and prequels and trilogies and re-releases, tentpoles and blockbuster – ALL FULL OF NOTHING. Can you please get over your “white” selves in Hollywood. VANITY job #1?
I had all but given up on romantic comedies, so I was a little weary of TLAM but it was excellent. Not a cinematic masterpiece but it was the best RoCom I’ve seen in a long time. Dare I compare it to Boomerang! Charming, with jokes galore. The ensemble cast gave a top notch performance; Magen Good certainly deserves the screen time. Morris Chestnut! We need more Morris Chestnut, he is so fine.
Here is why so many object to the term term ‘urban’, even if it is an official Hollywood genre. Urban is not a synonym for people of African descent. it is a geographical location or an environment. As far as I am concerned, Woody Allen is the quintessential urban filmmaker. Make sense?
As a black woman I can you tell we do not employ this term to describe ourselves. It is used when non-blacks want to denote our race but don’t have the stones to say it. If you feel need to use race as adjective then it’s black or African American, not urban!
Thank you. I live in the suburbs and from what I can see of this film, so do most of the people in it. And the point about Woody Allen is excellent. Manhattan, and where he places most of his famous films, are as “urban” as it gets, but his films don’t get the “urban” description. So, it is a code word for a specific race when used as it is to describe Think Like a Man. Hollywood and this site need to get over themselves and be honest or at least admit what it all means and lose the defensiveness. I still want to see Batman and the Avengers described as for suburban, white fanboys between the ages of 13-25.
I saw Battleship today. I liked the movie. It was enjoyable popcorm movie where you would sit for 2 hours and watch how big ships destroy each other. Special effects were very impressive. Even Rihanna was good. Skarsgård was adorable. If you compare it with Transformes then Battleship is way more interesting.
But oh my God at Taylor Kitsch. So awful. Like I know that he is my main character and I suppose to empathize with him and support him but he was so annoying and unsympathetic that the whole movie I regretted that they didn’t make Alexander Skarsgård main character.
Sad fact is that Taylor is one the same acting level as Pattinson or LaBeauf or even Aniston. He was good as that (I suppose because I didn’t watch) sexy bad boy on Friday Night Lights. But when he tries to play different character, a hero – then he fails hard. He was weak and disappointing in Wolverine, he was bad as John Carter and he is just annoying in Battleship. He was playing one of those irresponsible idiots like Gibson in Lethal Weapon or Willis in Die Hard, but we still liked them because they were charming. But Taylor doesn’t have sweet charm in him and he was just stupid unsympathetic annoying idiot. He was very miscast here.