Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Box Office Battle - July 15th

As I mentioned in last week's post, where I almost completely nailed the opening numbers for Horrible Bosses, by the way, I am going to be going to Chicago from July 14th through July 18th for this year's Pitchfork Music Festival, which means that Processed Grass is going to be contentless for the next few days. Also as a result of this trip, my weekly box office prognostication column is coming a couple of days earlier than it would normally be posted. And this week is a big one with two beloved franchises going head to head for all the affections of children and adults the nation over. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part Two attempts to conclude the long running franchise with a thrilling, emotionally satisfying conclusion, while Disney's Winnie the Pooh brings back a much older literary figure for a completely new adventure that targets the heartstrings of all the people who have ever been familiar with the honey loving stuffed animal. So is the marketplace going to be split, or does one have the sheer strength to out power the other?


Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part Two

I'll save you the anticipation, there's absolutely no chance that the last Harry Potter movie does not clean up at the box office this week. The question that I always ask myself when thinking about how well a movie is going to perform is "what have you done for me lately?" Well, I have had mixed feelings about the quality of the Harry Potter movies up to this point, and the slower paced HPatDHPO - now that's what I call an abbreviation - seemed to isolate some of casual fans of the series, but at some point a film like this one stops being just a movie and becomes an event. That's one of the major reasons I'm going to be doing my all day Harry Potter marathon, it's why so many people camped out at London, and it's going to be the reason that this film opens as one of the year's biggest movies. And think, it doesn't even need Team Edward!

So just how big is the final Potter movie going to be? Well considering that the series, even before being adapted for the big screen, was able to appeal to just about everyone with a pulse, I would likely say enormous. The penultimate film opened to about $125M, and that was with a November opening. Though the other Potter films opened to less when they released in July - actually two years ago to the day Half Blood Prince took in $77M in its first weekend - this movie will benefit from the increase that 3-D tickets provide, along with the cultural obligation that many will feel to see the last entry. I would actually compare this film more to The Dark Knight than any other movie released recently, which opened to $150M, and though it doesn't have the Ledger factor, I can definitely see the end of this magical series being almost as big of a draw.

Prediction: $143.32M


Winnie the Pooh

I understand that releasing the latest reworking of a beloved Disney franchise alongside Harry Potter is a counter programing play, but honestly how much audience does Disney expect to take away from the Harry Potter juggernaut? The trailers have hit me pretty hard, and I'm excited to take a trip back to the Hundred Acre Wood, but by and large I imagine this move is bound to backfire on the Mouse House. Though I may actually be misreading the rationale for releasing this right now, as it seems to be positioned as an alternative for parents who are less comfortable taking younger children to a long, and likely violent, Harry Potter movie. That would certainly explain the less than 90 minute run time, and the inexplicable attachment of the Jake and the Neverland Pirates episode to pad this time out. Nothing says family friendly quite like the shenanigans of a group of people who were known for bloodthirsty murder and theft!

Releasing an animated film, especially with a name as recognizable as Winnie the Pooh strikes me as odd for July. Because it's such an anomaly I'm not even sure which films I can compare it to, animated or otherwise. I suppose the obvious one would be Ramona and Beezus simply because Selena Gomez had the Disney appeal, even though that movie was not a Disney product, and it was targeted at younger audiences. It also seemed to be marketed as a highly inoffensive family film. That one opened to about $7M around this time last year, going up both against Salt in its first week and Inception in a repeat bid. And by that point in time neither were as big as Harry Potter. Still, I can see Disney's latest offering, being positioned as a breath of fresh air rather than with a Cars 2~esque cash grab, doing around those Ramona and Beezus numbers this week.

Prediction: $7.92M

This, obviously, means that Transformers 3 is going to be displaced from the top spot. As disappointed as I am that I am not going to be able to see both of these news films this weekend, I am partially relieved that I don't have to worry about picking between the two either. But this is a rare weekend where all of the wide releases show potential to be good movies, and that's always a comforting thought. That said, here's how the I imagine the top five will look after Sunday ends:

1. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part Two
2. Transformers: Dark of the Moon
3. Horrible Bosses
4. Winnie the Pooh
5. Zookeeper

How much money do you think Harry Potter is going to make? Anyone planning on going at midnight and/or dressing up? Let me know in the comments section below!

Rich

Comments are welcome and, for anyone with a literary mind, I encourage checking out my poetry blog filled with all original works for your reading pleasure. Or if video games are more your thing, I have a blog dedicated to all gaming news, reviews, and opinions.

Also, I am on the old Twitter thing so I guess you can follow me at twitter.com/FLYmeatwad.

© 2011 Richard James Thorne

2 comments:

  1. Love this! I completely agree with everything you said about Harry Potter, especially.

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  2. Thanks! I still haven't seen the new movie yet - going on Wednesday - but I'm super excited. My prediction was off a good amount, but since it made so much that's probably for the best. I love Harry Potter!

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