BOX OFFICE REPORT
July 1-4, 2016
(estimates from BoxOfficeMojo.com)
TOP 5
Finding Dory | $50.1 million |
The Legend of Tarzan | $45.5 million |
The Purge: Election Year | $34.7 million |
The BFG | $22.2 million |
Independence Day: Resurgence | $20.2 million |
Last week, I was sort of right in my predictions. I just had the movies wrong. Despite being seemingly written off by Warner Brothers, and just assuming that no one cared about Tarzan anymore, I figured The Legend of Tarzan would be the summer’s biggest flop (after Warcraft). It still might go down as a loss, but it’s The BFG that left a giant crater in the box office. David Yates’ update of the Edgar Rice Burroughs character came in just behind Finding Dory for the four-day holiday weekend, taking in an estimated $45.5 million. That’s not great for a movie that cost nearly $200 million to make, but still not the unmitigated disaster many analysts were expecting.
But The Purge: Election Year really capitalized on the holiday. The $10 million horror thriller tripled its budget in only four days. It opened slightly higher than 2014’s Anarchy but slightly below the 2013 original. Still, it’s likely to pass both films to become the highest-grossing film in the franchise. Who’d have thunk it?
But the real slaughter happened to The BFG. Steven Spielberg has been one of America’s greatest and often most consistently good filmmakers for some time now. But he usually averages one flop a decade and this appears to be his whiff for the 21st Century. Despite costing $140 million and having the Disney machine to promote it, the film only managed $22.2 million over four days. That’s a giant-sized disaster. Speaking of giant-sized disasters? Independence Day: Resurgence got no boost from the titular holiday, losing 50 percent from its already weak opening.
Outside the top 5:
- This Weekend's Indie Champ: Life, Animated, a heartwarming documentary about a boy who couldn’t speak, but found a way to communicate through animation. It averaged $11,169 on three screens.
- Believe it or not: With nearly $100 million in the bank, Central Intelligence is the highest-grossing live-action movie of 2016 that’s not based on a previously existing property.
- Swiss Army Man’s farting corpse isn’t quite a phenomenon yet, but it did jump up to 11th place thanks to an aggressive expansion from distributor A24. Word-of-mouth will be tough to gauge, since people will either love it or hate it.
Next week:
I really won’t be surprised if Finding Dory cedes its spot to another animated movie. So I’m predicting The Secret Life of Pets takes the top spot with $55 million. Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates could be a hit on par with the original Neighbors, but I think we’re looking more like How to Be Single, with only $15 million for its first weekend.