BOX OFFICE REPORT
December 9-11, 2016
(estimates from BoxOfficeMojo.com)
TOP 5
Moana | $18.8 million |
Office Christmas Party | $17.5 million |
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them |
$10.7 million |
Arrival | $5.6 million |
Doctor Strange | $4.6 million |
Despite an aggressively marketed new comedy – the first big one since Boo! A Madea Halloween – Moana remained No. 1 for a third weekend in a row. Though the family-friendly animated film has held strong, it still has yet to cross $200 million, putting it well behind other animated films this year, even other offerings from Disney.
Office Christmas Party – the third Christmas comedy of the season, after Almost Christmas and Bad Santa 2 – has already done the best of the trio, opening with an estimated $17.5 million. Still, it's proving part of 2016's troubling trend of studio comedies underperforming. Bad Moms and Central Intelligence were the only real breakouts, and this one seems unlikely to top $100 million, especially given the onslaught of competition it will face in the next few weeks.
Fantastic Beasts is now just shy of $200 million, meaning it's likely to finish as the lowest-grossing Harry Potter flick, and sure to send Warner Brothers to re-thinking if they should really be making four more of these. Arrival continues to be the word-of-mouth hit of the fall, while Doctor Strange is finishing up its solid run.
Outside the top 5:
- This Weekend's Indie Champ: As predicted, La La Land had the biggest per-screen average of the year, and nearly of all time. With an astonishing $171,000 on each of its five screens, that's just below The Grand Budapest Hotel, which smashed records in 2014 with more than $200,000 on its four screens. This sets it up to be one of the biggest Oscar contenders of the winter.
- Miss Sloane certainly didn't set the world on fire in its expansion. Playing on 1,648 screens, the gun-control lobbying drama only took in $1.9 million.
- If nothing much has excited you this fall, three smaller films are worth your attention that haven't hit any big milestones yet: Manchester by the Sea (No. 8), The Edge of Seventeen (No. 17) and Moonlight (No. 18) are all worth your dollars.
Next week: Rogue One will eclipse the competition like the Death Star. The only question is how high its debut will be. I don't think $250 million is possible, since it doesn't have the years-long anticipation like we all had for The Force Awakens. So I think $175 million is a safe bet. Collateral Beauty is the only other competition and despite Will Smith's star power, it won't even make $20 million.