Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Warner Bros. poised to take summer box-office crown

Updated: 2009-09-05 10:46
(Agencies)

Warner Bros. poised to take summer box-office crown

(L-R) Zach Galifianakis, Ed Helms, and Bradley Cooper in a scene from "The Hangover".[Agencies]

LOS ANGELES  - Topping the summer box office has become habit-forming at Warner Bros. Hollywood's summer ends Labor Day, but already it's clear that Warners again will top distributor market-share rankings with $957 million in domestic grosses since the season began May 1, according to Nielsen EDI.

That's down from the studio's "Dark Knight"-fueled $1 billion tally last summer. Still, Warners sits well ahead of the domestic distribution pack year-to-date and is tracking 3 percent ahead of its industry-record haul from a year ago with $1.47 billion and counting.

The studio's seasonal performance has yielded an industry-best market share of 23 percent. Paramount copped the season's silver medal with $874 million so far and a 21 percent share; Disney is third with $604 million and 15 percent.

All told, when receipts are calculated through Labor Day, summer box office will finish north of summer 2007's record $4.16 billion. But with 3D premiums driving a big rise in average ticket prices, there's scant chance of beating summer 2004's admissions record of 642 million tickets sold after accounting for inflation.

Meanwhile, Warners brass say the studio's best is yet to come.

"We have 10 films to release by the end of the year, so it looks to me that we're going to break our record again," Warners domestic distribution president Dan Fellman says. "But we'll have to take it one picture at a time."

"POTTER" POWER

Warners might wish they were all Harry Potter movies. After opening worldwide July 15, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" is on track to become the six-film franchise's first $300 million domestic grosser since the 2001 original.

Though the studio's May 21 release "Terminator Salvation" underperformed with $125 million domestically, pictures produced by Warners' New Line label are proving to be the gift that keeps on giving.

New Line's summer successes included "Ghosts of Girlfriends Past," a modestly budgeted romantic comedy that unspooled May 1 en route to $55 million, and "The Time Traveler's Wife," an August 14 release that has grossed nearly $50 million.

Then there was "The Hangover." A co-production of Warners and Legendary Pictures, the bawdy Vegas comedy managed to overachieve even before hitting theaters. Prerelease buzz was so strong that Warners green-lighted a sequel for release in May 2011.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

8.03K
 
 
...
...