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"Terminator Salvation" tops overseas box office (Reuters)

thaniyo

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Red Shirt
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - "Terminator Salvation" broadened its international presence over the weekend and claimed the No. 1 spot at the overseas box office, while the previous week's champ, "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian," slipped to second place.


With the comic fantasy "Land of the Lost" opening overseas next weekend, the international circuit lacked a high-profile debut this round.


"Terminator Salvation" grossed $67.5 million from 8,325 screens in 70 markets. The fourth title in the sci-fi action series had been in foreign release for a fortnight, playing mostly limited dates in the Middle East and Asia. The Christian Bale/Sam Worthington vehicle broke wide over the weekend, finishing in first place in all but four of the territories it played.


The leading market was the U.K., where "Salvation" grossed $11.6 million from 900 locations. Russia produced $8 million from 786 sites, the 10th biggest weekend opener ever for a Hollywood title in the market.


"Terminator Salvation's" early foreign gross is $97.2 million. With $4.4 million from paid previews in Japan factored in, the cume is $101.6 million.



Last weekend's No. 1 foreign attraction, "Battle of the Smithsonian," generated $26.7 million from 8,300 screens in 66 markets. Its foreign total stands at $148.4 million. The worldwide tally is $275.7 million.


The family comedy starring Ben Stiller premiered at No. 1 in Korea ($4.8 million from 542 spots) and finished first in its second China weekend with $2.1 million from 818 locations.


No. 3, Tom Hanks-starring "Angels & Demons," drew $22.3 million from 9,190 screens in 100 markets, hiking "The Da Vinci Code" follow-up's international gross to $293 million.


Fourth was the animation feature "Up," which opened at the top of the box office in Mexico, Colombia and Venezuela for an overall weekend tally of $7.8 million from 1,270 screens in four markets, including Russia. The international gross for "Up" stands at $13.5 million in 10 days of release. Worldwide total is $150.8 million.



The 11th "Star Trek" edition finished at No. 5, dialing up $6 million in its fifth weekend, playing 4,370 screens in 62 markets, for a solid international total of $112 million (worldwide, $334.8 million). Its foreign total is easily the biggest overseas tally of any of the "Star Trek" titles. The series' top grosser previously was 1996's "Star Trek: First Contact," with offshore box office of $57.4 million.


"Hannah Montana : The Movie," the teen pop saga starring Miley Cyrus, generated $5.6 million from 2,100 screens in 21 markets, for an international gross thus far of $43.5 million.



"X-Men Origins: Wolverine" drew $3.2 million during the weekend from 5,096 sites in 48 territories, hiking its foreign cumulative gross to $176.2 million. "State of Play," the thriller starring Russell Crowe, grossed $2.5 million from 1,170 sites in 28 markets for a total of $28.1 million.



Sam Raimi's horror picture "Drag Me to Hell" opened in the Philippines and Thailand and generated an estimated $2.4 million overall from 860 screens. The movie's cumulative gross for 10 days stands at $7.3 million.


(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)

:techman::techman::techman:
 
Warners is only the distributor in North America. Sony is releasing the film in most international territories. It's no surprise that it's doing well internationally despite a lackluster domestic box office. Terminator 3 performed far better internationally than domestically, too.

The structure of the financing could pave the way for a fifth film. Because of the domestic/international split for T3, Warners paid substantially less for the domestic rights than Sony and the other international distributors did for the international rights. The film has a reported production budget of $200 million, and Warners paid about $60 million to distribute it in North America.
 
I'm glad its doing well overseas. Its getting hammered way too hard by people with skewed opinions on the film. Too hung up on T2, the show, Arnold or whatever.
Its a decent film and I can't wait for a directors cut.
 
I just saw the movie, today. Frankly, I enjoyed it a lot more than I had expected to. It's not perfect. But I really liked it.



And the people of the world call americans ''stupid''?


You're going to insult people who like something that you don't?
 
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - "Terminator Salvation" broadened its international presence over the weekend and claimed the No. 1 spot at the overseas box office, while the previous week's champ, "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian," slipped to second place.


With the comic fantasy "Land of the Lost" opening overseas next weekend, the international circuit lacked a high-profile debut this round.


"Terminator Salvation" grossed $67.5 million from 8,325 screens in 70 markets. The fourth title in the sci-fi action series had been in foreign release for a fortnight, playing mostly limited dates in the Middle East and Asia. The Christian Bale/Sam Worthington vehicle broke wide over the weekend, finishing in first place in all but four of the territories it played.


The leading market was the U.K., where "Salvation" grossed $11.6 million from 900 locations. Russia produced $8 million from 786 sites, the 10th biggest weekend opener ever for a Hollywood title in the market.


"Terminator Salvation's" early foreign gross is $97.2 million. With $4.4 million from paid previews in Japan factored in, the cume is $101.6 million.



Last weekend's No. 1 foreign attraction, "Battle of the Smithsonian," generated $26.7 million from 8,300 screens in 66 markets. Its foreign total stands at $148.4 million. The worldwide tally is $275.7 million.


The family comedy starring Ben Stiller premiered at No. 1 in Korea ($4.8 million from 542 spots) and finished first in its second China weekend with $2.1 million from 818 locations.


No. 3, Tom Hanks-starring "Angels & Demons," drew $22.3 million from 9,190 screens in 100 markets, hiking "The Da Vinci Code" follow-up's international gross to $293 million.


Fourth was the animation feature "Up," which opened at the top of the box office in Mexico, Colombia and Venezuela for an overall weekend tally of $7.8 million from 1,270 screens in four markets, including Russia. The international gross for "Up" stands at $13.5 million in 10 days of release. Worldwide total is $150.8 million.



The 11th "Star Trek" edition finished at No. 5, dialing up $6 million in its fifth weekend, playing 4,370 screens in 62 markets, for a solid international total of $112 million (worldwide, $334.8 million). Its foreign total is easily the biggest overseas tally of any of the "Star Trek" titles. The series' top grosser previously was 1996's "Star Trek: First Contact," with offshore box office of $57.4 million.


"Hannah Montana : The Movie," the teen pop saga starring Miley Cyrus, generated $5.6 million from 2,100 screens in 21 markets, for an international gross thus far of $43.5 million.



"X-Men Origins: Wolverine" drew $3.2 million during the weekend from 5,096 sites in 48 territories, hiking its foreign cumulative gross to $176.2 million. "State of Play," the thriller starring Russell Crowe, grossed $2.5 million from 1,170 sites in 28 markets for a total of $28.1 million.



Sam Raimi's horror picture "Drag Me to Hell" opened in the Philippines and Thailand and generated an estimated $2.4 million overall from 860 screens. The movie's cumulative gross for 10 days stands at $7.3 million.


(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)

:techman::techman::techman:

Terminator is doing better now than it was before, but BoxOfficeMojo still lists its cumulative gross at about $130 million. Given that it was filmed with a $200 million production budget, and has lost some major momentum, I'm not optimistic about a sequel being greenlit right away.
 
^ McG said during the press tour for the film - I think it was on the Premire show on TVGuide channel - that T5 has already been greenlit and they're already doing preproduction.
 
I think the real question is how does the Box Office performance effect MGM's interest in T5? Will WB let it go easier now?
 
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