BOX OFFICE REPORT
January 8-10, 2016
(estimates from BoxOfficeMojo.com)
TOP 5
Star Wars: The Force Awaken | ($41.6 million) |
The Revenant | ($38.0 million) |
Daddy’s Home | ($15.0 million) |
The Forest | ($13.0 million) |
Sisters | ($7.1 million) |
There was a disturbance in the force on Friday when The Revenant took the top spot from Star Wars: The Force Awakens. That lead did not last for the whole weekend, however, as the seventh installment continued its box office dominance. This is the first time a movie has made more than $800 million domestically. But now it will look slightly vulnerable. It’s highly unlikely it will be No. 1 next week and probably will not return to the top spot again. Still, what a run.
The Revenant was a very close No. 2. The Leonardo DiCaprio-led survivor story debuted with an impressive $38 million. That speaks to Leo’s star power, since a movie about fur trappers in the 1800s isn’t exactly a well-known commodity. Last year, director Alejandro G. Iñárritu won the Oscar for Birdman. That was his highest grossing movie to date with $42.3 million. The Revenant will pass that later this week.
Daddy’s Home took the third spot, continuing to hold well since opening Christmas Day. The Forest, the only truly new debut of 2016 thus far, did better than expected, taking in $13 million for fourth place. Sisters took No. 5 with $7.1 million.
Outside the top 5:
- This Weekend's Indie Champ: Anomalisa, the animated romance, took in $13,000 on each of its 17 screens, as it continues to expand.
- The Hateful Eight took a pretty big hit in its second week of wide release. Quentin Tarantino’s latest fell nearly 60 percent, but has made $41 million since opening in limited release on Christmas Day.
- Chimes at Midnight, the rare Orson Welles adaptation of several of Shakespeare’s plays featuring the character Falstaff, continues to do well in its limited engagement. It made $19,000 on its lone screen.
Next week:
2016 gets started in a big way. Ride Along 2 (the sequel to 2014’s breakout hit) takes on 13 Hours (aka Michael Bay’s Benghazi movie). I think the former will be No. 1 with $40 million, while the latter will take the second spot with $30 million. Either way, Star Wars won’t be No. 1 anymore.