Daily Box Office Analysis

By David Mumpower

July 27, 2012

What, you've never read 50 Shades of Grey?

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Based upon the weekday numbers I have examined, there is nothing in the data that suggests audiences are fired up over The Dark Knight Rises. If anything, the current data pointedly suggests that a sub-$65 million weekend is in the offing. Assuming this is true, the movie will be in the $285-$290 million range after Sunday. Also, it will have absolutely no momentum as we go forward because another batch of negative headlines will provide further negative reinforcement for consumers.

Is the above unreasonable? Maybe. In fact, I hope so. What I state with confidence is that if there are no further surprises from here, The Dark Knight Rises will have a much lower final domestic gross than any of us would have listed as its absolute floor. Batman 7 earned $64.1 million Monday-through-Thursday. It is falling at a rate even worse than this model but let’s say that it declines 50% week over week twice in a row. That’s $32 million during the next batch of weekdays followed by $16 million the weekdays after that.

If The Dark Knight Rises does not regain positive buzz somehow, its $48 million of weekdays combined with two weekends of roughly $95 million in revenue places the movie around $368 million after 24 days. The Dark Knight was at $441.6 million after 24 days. This is how quickly The Dark Knight Rises is falling behind the pace of its predecessor. Over the last two weeks, I entailed the reasons why The Amazing Spider-Man was falling apart. Several of you felt I was crazy to argue that it would earn less than $275 million, which is all but a lock now. The Dark Knight Rises is currently on that same trajectory.




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I would like to be wrong about this. I have seen a lot of people mention that they believe the movie recovers in its second weekend. I sincerely hope this is the case. I am not rooting against The Dark Knight Rises. To the contrary, I quite liked the movie and highly recommend it. I think it is better than The Dark Knight, which I found uneven. What I am detailing is the fact that there is nothing in its weekday numbers thus far that suggests this movie will recover. If anything, signs point toward a genuinely disappointing second weekend as well as a truncated domestic performance.

In order to avoid this fate, The Dark Knight Rises has to behave oddly. What I mean by this is that its second weekend needs to behave in a rare capacity for a title in release. I am not ruling this out because what happened last week was unprecedented. There absolutely exists the possibility that The Dark Knight Rises does the unexpected. My point is that we should not count on it. Perhaps consumers cannot separate this film from the tragedy that occurred at an exhibition of it. Based on the data thus far, this unfortunately appears to be the case.

Prove me wrong, North American movie-goers. I very much want to be wrong about this.

In something of a rarity, box office was universally up yesterday. Every other movie in the top ten was up from Wednesday. This should give everyone in the industry hope that consumers are comfortable going back to the theater again. The combined revenue for the top ten on Thursday was $22.7 million, up 2% from Wednesday’s $22.3 million.

Let’s hope people stop letting the actions of one nutjob stop them from enjoying trips to the movie theater. I’ll be going twice. I hope that Beasts of the Southern Wild is as good as everyone has been telling me. And yes, I will be seeing The Dark Knight Rises again. I feel it is the least I can do after this week’s box office analysis.


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