Fast Five passes Rio to become the worldwide #1 film released in the January-April period.
To see the Top 25 worldwide chart, click "Read more" below.
JAN-APR 2011 WORLDWIDE FILM GROSSES TOP 25 FILMS Int'l
Rank ($ MILLIONS) Impact
LW TW Worldwide Domestic Overseas Ratio
Rank ($ MILLIONS) Impact
LW TW Worldwide Domestic Overseas Ratio
2 1 Fast Five 483 211 272* 1.29
1 2 Rio 450 147 304* 2.07 3 3 Rango 241 122 119 .97
4 4 Green Hornet 228 99 130 1.31
5 5 Just Go with It 213 103 110 1.07
6 6 Battle: Los Angeles 201 83 119 1.43
8 8 Hop 170 108 62* .57
11 9 Limitless 147 85 62 .73
9 10 No Strings Attached 146 71 75 1.06
10 11 I Am Number Four 144 55 89 1.63
12 12 Unknown 125 64 61 .97
13 13 Adjustment Bureau 116 63 53 .84
14 14 Justin Bieber: Never 98 73 25 .35
15 15 The Rite 96 33 63 1.91
16 16 Source Code 96 55 41* .7415 15 The Rite 96 33 63 1.91
18 17 Sucker Punch 89 35 53* 1.52
19 18 Paul 88 37 50 1.35
21 19 Scre4m 87 37 50* 1.35
18 20 Red Riding Hood 87 37 50 1.35
20 21 Season of the Witch 84 25 59 2.40
22 22 Hall Pass 81 45 36 .81
23 23 Big Mommas: Like Father 80 38 43 1.13 25 25 Water for Elephants 79 58 21 .37
TOTAL Jan-Apr Movies 4639 2434 2205* .91
(Total of 47 movies)
How to read: From left to right, the first two numbers are a film's rankings Last Week (LW) and This Week (TW), Worldwide gross (in millions), which is the sum of Estimated Domestic Final and International gross to date. (The two numbers do not always add up to the worldwide number exactly due to rounding.) The International Impact Ratio indicates relative international performance. The Domestic number is either the actual final gross or the latest ShowbuzzDaily Domestic Ultimate estimate if the movie is still playing. The Overseas number is the actual gross to date, which tends to lag in reporting. An asterisk indicates significant overseas upside to come. The International Impact Ratio is the film's Overseas number divided by its Domestic number.
The total numbers at the bottom of the chart show that worldwide box office has crossed the $4.6 billion line for the movies released January-April. (The totals do not include Thor, a May release.) Overseas grosses have almost caught up to the domestic total for January-April, while we expect overseas to beat domestic by a wide margin in the summer period.
A reminder, we divide the year into thirds (Winter/Spring movies released between January and April, Summer Movies between May and August, and Fall/Holiday movies between September and December). We will chart the January-April movies through the end of May, when we will start tracking the international audience for the May-August films.
A reminder, we divide the year into thirds (Winter/Spring movies released between January and April, Summer Movies between May and August, and Fall/Holiday movies between September and December). We will chart the January-April movies through the end of May, when we will start tracking the international audience for the May-August films.
Check back Wednesday for a look at the mid-week domestic performance of movies currently in release (a combined look at Monday and Tuesday numbers).
0 comments:
Post a Comment