...my gut says Hangover might suffer.
Gotta love that phrasing.

Doubtless Into Darkness will be number three at best next weekend, which is relative - it doesn't tell you how much money it will make.
...my gut says Hangover might suffer.
For all of the mixed reactions to it, TMP was a huge hit. In adjusted terms its the second highest grossing Trek movie, behind 2009's Star Trek.
FTFYmeanwhile, nuTrek2 is already a performing well compared to a film based on a popular Marvel character who was the marquee character in the third highest grossing film of all time, released just one year earlier.
Yes--meanwhile, nuTrek2 is already a deflated life raft...
Nope, sorry. 168 million dollars in a week is - what, twice TWOK's entire first-run gross? Go ahead, adjust for inflation, turn it inside out and upside down and it still knocks oldTrek flat.![]()
Let's see nuTrek take 8 times its budget like Wrath of Khan did...
While $84M is short of Paramount’s $100M predictions from last week, it is actually in line with predictions they were making three weeks ago before they moved the release date up one day to Thursday May 16th. In the end it looks like the last minute release date change didn’t really give them the box office boost they were hoping for.
Yep. That's the long and the short of it.
Folks running around getting upset over a "magic number" that only came up a week or so ago are pretty much flunking the exercise.
Costs are much higher now, even adjusted for inflation, but so are revenues from ancillary markets. TWOK and Star Trek were similar-sized hits in the domestic market in their respective years and by the standards of the marketplace they were competing in. TWOK was #6 for the year, ST was #7 for the year.Let's see nuTrek take 8 times its budget like Wrath of Khan did, then talk about knocking it flat. Only about 2 billion dollars to go!
I highly doubt anyone in Paramount is nervously wringing their hands when STID met the original projections by Paramount of $85 million for the total through Sunday. So some genius in marketing decided to announce that Paramount was projecting a $100 million take just before the release in an obvious attempt to drum up buzz about the film... Big deal, happens all the time?
The film is doing just fine.
Yancy
$400 million is okay for a film of this budget level. $450 million or higher and you're on much more solid ground. I'm sure there'll be a sequel either way, but that sequel's budget level could rest on where in the 400s the film ends up.Agreed Dennis, I'm not seeing the issue here... the film has taken in $168 million worldwide and will eclipse $400 million (probably more like $450 million), easily passing the box office take of Trek 2009.
Nervously wringing their hands? No. Somewhat disappointed after all the extra expense and the expectations that go with a sequel to a well-liked film? Sure. And, again, the initial forecast of $85 million was for a 3-day weekend, not a 4-day weekend. It makes a pretty big difference when it comes to the ripple effect as the box office run unfolds.I highly doubt anyone in Paramount is nervously wringing their hands when STID met the original projections by Paramount of $85 million for the total through Sunday.
Posted 20 May 2013 - 12:01 AM
Sunday looks like
STid 21.5-7m, IM3 10.8, TGG 6.8
So are we winning?
Let's see nuTrek take 8 times its budget like Wrath of Khan did...
Uh huh.
I bought a two dollar scratch-off ticket last month and won ten dollars.
Five times as much as I invested!
It's still only ten bucks.
So are we winning?
I've seen it three times, admittedly, all weekday early morning/afternoon showings, but the theatres were certainly busier than is the norm for those times.Very busy here in the UK the three times I saw it, the last two times was during it's second weekend here.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.