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The Final Ongoing Star Trek Box Office Thread

Trek is leaving the final first run theater in my area after today. The only place it is left showing is on one screen at the second run theater, where I will see it for the 9th time tonight. I was finally able to convince my social hermit father that after 3 months he can go see it in a movie theater rather than waiting for PPV. :)
 
$69,509 for Wednesday the 12th. Down 8% from Tuesday, but up 22.6% from last Wednesday (virtually every movie experienced a drop from Tuesday anyway). Per screen average was $185.

Domestic total: $255,541,196.

Be interesting to see if it can squeeze past 256 this weekend... Depends on the theater counts I guess.
 
$69,509 for Wednesday the 12th. Down 8% from Tuesday, but up 22.6% from last Wednesday (virtually every movie experienced a drop from Tuesday anyway). Per screen average was $185.

Domestic total: $255,541,196.

Be interesting to see if it can squeeze past 256 this weekend... Depends on the theater counts I guess.

According to Box Office Mojo...Theatre count is only down 19% (down 72 theatres for a total of 303.)

I doubt it can make it to $256,000,000 by the end of Sunday. I suspect it will pass this figure early next week. It will likely finish around $257,000,000 domestic and $383,000,000 global. An excellent run!!!! :)
 
Gross for Thursday August 13th: $71,201, up 2.4% from Wednesday, and up 29.2% from last Thursday. Per screen average was $190.

Domestic total: $255,612,397.
 
Seems to be about right according to boxoffice...

Still kicking TransformerII's ass at the local IMAX overall--next film better secure 4 weeks of IMAX showings nationwide, that's all I can say.

Wonder how TrII performed by comparison to ST in terms of IMAX overall (as a percentage)...
 
Yep, early estimates have Star Trek taking in $311,000 over the weekend, which would put its domestic total at $255,924,000. It's definitely within arm's reach of $256 million.
 
^ Not bad at all. Not bad at all.

I was pleased when it went over the 250 mark. Everything past that is gravy, as far as I'm concerned.
 
So for now it'll settle in between the original JAWS and MONSTERS INC. in the Top 50 list. Until some other movie...most likely a piece of abject junk or crap...boots it down another notch.
 
Good news! Star Trek once again made more than the estimates predicted (almost $13,000 more, to be precise), bringing in $323,830. That's down 26.2% from last weekend, but given the smaller amount of theatres showing it (and the fact that many are probably discount cinemas at this point), that's not bad at all.

Domestic total: $255,936,227. It should cross $256 million after tomorrow, unless it manages to make over $64,000 today (which isn't impossible -- in fact, it'll probably be very close. We'll just have to wait and see).
 
Good showing. I think the last time I made a prediction for it's final tally I said between $255M and $256M, so it will pass that. I'm not going to bother trying to predict exactly where it will end up again, it's already done great business and that's good enough for me.

I just wish it was still playing somewhere near me!
 
Alrighty then, lets see how Trek compares to the other 2009 films at this point. Here's a list of the highest-grossing movies of the year thus far:

DOMESTIC

1. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (P/DW) $396,758,605

2. Up (BV) $288,223,782

3. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (WB) $283,879,025

4. The Hangover (WB) $265,790,452

5. Star Trek (Par.) $255,936,227

6. Monsters Vs. Aliens (P/DW) $198,255,437

7. Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (Fox) $190,855,447

8. X-Men Origins: Wolverine (Fox) $179,801,299

9. Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (Fox) $175,538,731

10. The Proposal (BV) $157,693,055

11. Fast and Furious (Uni.) $155,064,265

12. Paul Blart: Mall Cop (Sony) $146,336,178

13. Taken (Fox) $145,000,989

14. Angels & Demons (Sony) $133,375,846

15. Terminator Salvation (WB) $125,093,360

16. Watchmen (WB) $107,509,799

17. G-Force (BV) $99,056,616

18. G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (Par.) $98,577,529

19. Public Enemies (Uni.) $96,344,690

20. He's Just Not That Into You (WB-NL) $93,953,653


WORLDWIDE

1. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Domestic: $283,879,025 / 32.9%
+ Foreign: $578,000,000 / 67.1%
= Worldwide: $861,879,025

2. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Domestic: $396,758,605 / 48.1%
+ Foreign: $427,280,610 / 51.9%
= Worldwide: $824,039,215

3. Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
Domestic: $190,855,447 / 24.2%
+ Foreign: $598,344,057 / 75.8%
= Worldwide: $789,199,504

4. Angels & Demons
Domestic: $133,375,846 / 27.6%
+ Foreign: $350,489,540 / 72.4%
= Worldwide: $483,865,386

5. Up
Domestic: $288,223,782 / 69.2 %
+ Foreign: $128,000,000 / 30.8%
= Worldwide: $416,223,782

6. The Hangover
Domestic: $265,790,452 / 66.0%
+ Foreign: $136,750,000 / 34.0%
= Worldwide: $402,540,452

7. Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian
Domestic: $175,538,731 / 44.3%
+ Foreign: $220,565,674 / 55.7%
= Worldwide: $396,104,405

8. Star Trek
Domestic: $255,936,227 / 66.9%
+ Foreign: $126,382,684 / 33.1%
= Worldwide: $382,318,911

9. Monsters vs. Aliens
Domestic: $198,255,437 / 52.3%
+ Foreign: $180,547,528 / 47.7%
= Worldwide: $378,802,965

10. Terminator Salvation
Domestic: $125,093,360 / 33.8%
+ Foreign: $245,325,967 / 66.2%
= Worldwide: $370,419,327

11. X-Men Origins: Wolverine
Domestic: $179,801,299 / 49.5%
+ Foreign: $183,473,584 / 50.5%
= Worldwide: $363,274,883

12. Fast and Furious
Domestic: $155,064,265 / 45.2%
+ Foreign: $187,894,710 / 54.8%
= Worldwide: $342,958,975

13. The Proposal
Domestic: $157,693,055 / 60.4%
+ Foreign: $103,600,000 / 39.6 %
= Worldwide: $261,293,055

14. G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra
Domestic: $98,577,529 / 52.4%
+ Foreign: $89,612,376 / 47.6%
= Worldwide: $188,189,905

15. Watchmen
Domestic: $107,509,799 / 58.5%
+ Foreign: $76,259,950 / 41.5%
= Worldwide: $183,769,749

16. Paul Blart: Mall Cop
Domestic: $146,336,178 / 79.8%
+ Foreign: $36,929,313 / 20.2%
= Worldwide: $183,265,491

17. Knowing
Domestic: $79,957,634 / 45.4%
+ Foreign: $96,074,656 / 54.6%
= Worldwide: $176,032,290

18. Public Enemies
Domestic: $96,344,690 / 55.8%
+ Foreign: $76,195,390 / 44.2%
= Worldwide: $172,540,080

19. He’s Just Not That Into You
Domestic: $93,953,653 / 55.0%
+ Foreign: $76,892,691 / 45.0%
= Worldwide: $170,846,344

20. Hannah Montana the Movie
Domestic: $79,576,189 / 51.9%
+ Foreign: $73,625,906 / 48.1%
= Worldwide: $153,202,095


As expected, Star Trek's position on the domestic front didn't change; it's sitting comfortably at #5, and will likely continue to do so for quite a while. Can it stay there until the end of the year? I'm not sure... I guess we'll have to wait and see if Avatar lives up to its hype and manages to draw in huge crowds.

Alas, Trek slipped to the #8 spot on the worldwide chart, as Pixar's Up gained a considerable amount of ground and climbed into the Top 5. Both Up and The Hangover have now passed $400 million worldwide -- pretty much expected for the former, and probably not something Warner Bros. dreamed of with the latter.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is now officially the highest-grossing film of the year worldwide, finally dethroning Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, with Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs coming in a not-too-distant third -- on a global level, these three are clearly the monster hits of the year.

Last week's big new release, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra has entered both lists (placing 18th domestically and 14th globally), and it will undoubtedly continue to climb, but just how much remains to be seen. Its weekend haul in North America was $22,324,341, down 59.2% from last weekend, which is fairly steep. It has done alright for itself so far, but with a $175 million budget, it's still got a way to go before it can be deemed profitable, and if this weekend is any indication, it might not have the legs to become the blockbuster the studio is hoping for.

On the subject of this past weekend, the top movie in North America was the new sci-fi release District 9, which scored $37,354,308 (internationally it made an additional $7,345,800, which is pretty solid considering it hasn't opened in too many foreign markets yet). With a budget of just $30 million, that's quite an impressive take.

It's been a pretty good summer for genre movies, hasn't it? :bolian:
 
I read Paramount thinks GI Joe could make it to 300 Mil. I don't see that happening at all considering the horrible WOM and fast dropping BO receipts.
 
T4 is almost an opposite flip of Trek domestic vs foreign, have a look.

And I have a whole thread dedicated to the disappointment, that stat brings me, but I am not going there in this thread.
 
Jesus, still with this crap? Paramount is happy with its foreign receipts, I think its about time you stopped complaining.
 
The international figures have me... emotionally compromised as well... :p

International figures are bound to improve next time, although I have a feeling that the disparity will still exist. But this time with 350 domestic and maybe 175-200 foreign.
 
Jesus, still with this crap? Paramount is happy with its foreign receipts, I think its about time you stopped complaining.

NO!

It's about time you start respecting other peoples perspective's that are based on facts.
And you need to stop trying to tell people what they can or can't post.
 
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