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July 4, 2015
 

FRIDAY 7.3.2015 Box Office Report

Based on Friday’s grosses, weekend #27 of 2015 looks like $130 million for the top 12 films Friday-Sunday, below the norm for this weekend but slightly above last year’s similar bummer of a July 4th weekend.  

Opening at 3,758 theaters Friday, Terminator: Genisys from Paramount is on track for a $26.5 million opening three-day weekend (somewhat below our $34.0 million ShowBuzzDaily forecast earlier this week).  The film is pacing toward an only somewhat above average $7,100 per theater for the weekend (compared to the $5,333 opening weekend average for all wide-release films the last two years). The first five days Wednesday through Sunday look like $42 million. Critical sentiment at RottenTomatoes is weak (27% positive overall and 25% positive with top critics). Terminator: Genisys is headed for $93 million total domestic.

Opening at 3,355 theaters Friday, Magic Mike XXL from Warner Brothers is on track for a $15.7 million opening three-day weekend (well below our $30.5 million forecast earlier this week).  The film is pacing toward a less than mediocre $4,700 per theater for the weekend. The first five days Wednesday through Sunday look like $31 million. Critical sentiment at RottenTomatoes is tilting positive (61% positive overall and 62% positive with top critics). Magic Mike XXL is headed for $75 million total domestic.

 

Weekend 27: July 3-5, 2015 ($ millions)
Pre-Wknd Showbuzz Forecast Early Weekend Estimate Actual Friday Gross Showbuzz Domestic Final Proj.
Inside Out Dis [30.8] 30.0 12.5 351
Jurassic World Uni [30.9] 28.9 11.8 662
Terminator: Genisys Par [34.0] 26.5 10.7 93
Magic Mike XXL WB [30.5] 15.1 6.30 75
Ted 2 Uni [14.3] 11.1 4.40 81
Max WB [6.9] 6.3 2.65 39
Spy Fox [5.4] 4.8 1.92 113
San Andreas WB [3.4] 2.6 1.05 157
Dope OpenR [1.3] 1.1 0.45 18

Note: The table above summarizes an early look at the weekend. The first column is a reminder of each film’s ShowBuzzDaily Forecast for the weekend (in brackets). The second column, on which the films are sorted, displays the new weekend projection for each film, based on the Friday numbers (the third column). The final column is a preliminary estimate of the ShowbuzzDaily Domestic Total number for the film’s total run in North America. A “++” indicates the Domestic number has been upgraded; a “–” indicates a downgrade.

Top Holdovers

Inside Out is headed for $30.0 million this weekend (down -43% from last weekend and near our $30.8 million forecast). Revised total domestic outlook: $351 million.

Jurassic World is headed for $28.9 million this weekend (down -47% from last weekend and a touch below our $30.9 million forecast). Revised total domestic outlook: $662 million.

Ted 2 is headed for $11.1 million this weekend (down -67% from last weekend and slightly below our $14.3 million forecast). Revised total domestic outlook: $81 million.

 

Total Box Office Volume

The Top 12 Films this weekend are looking like $130 million total Friday-Sunday, down -22% from the four-year average for the comparable weekend and up +8% from the same weekend last year.

WEEKEND 27 ($ millions)
Weekend Volume: Top 12 Films Top Movies Opening Each Weekend (Fri-Sun only)
2015 $130 Terminator: Genisys $26.5, Magic Mike XXL $15.7
2014 $121 Tammy $21.6, Deliver Us From Evil $9.7, Earth to Echo $8.4
2013 $222 Despicable Me 2 $83.5, The Lone Ranger $29.2
2012 $182 Amazing Spider-Man $62.0, Savages $16.0
2011 $192 Transformers: Dark of the Moon $97.9, Larry Crowne $13.1
Avg 2011-14 $168

Check back tomorrow for the Worldwide Studio Scorecard and the International Box Office report.



About the Author

Mitch Metcalf
MITCH METCALF has been tracking every US film release of over 500 screens (over 2300 movies and counting) since the storied weekend of May 20, 1994, when Maverick and Beverly Hills Cop 3 inspired countless aficionados to devote their lives to the art of cinema. Prior to that, he studied Politics and Economics at Princeton in order to prepare for his dream of working in television. He has been Head of West Coast Research at ABC, then moved to NBC in 2000 and became Head of Scheduling for 11 years.