Zhang Yimou’s One Second also opened over the weekend and grossed $10.6m in three days.
Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s The Croods: A New Age headed up the China box office over the three-day weekend (November 27-29), according to figures from Artisan Gateway, grossing $18.9m, almost twice as much as the $9.71m the film grossed in the US over Thanksgiving weekend.
The first The Croods movie grossed $6m (RMB40.1m) on its opening weekend in China in April 2013 and went on to take $60m (RMB394.6m). However, that was during an earlier stage of the market’s development, when China had fewer screens,...
Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s The Croods: A New Age headed up the China box office over the three-day weekend (November 27-29), according to figures from Artisan Gateway, grossing $18.9m, almost twice as much as the $9.71m the film grossed in the US over Thanksgiving weekend.
The first The Croods movie grossed $6m (RMB40.1m) on its opening weekend in China in April 2013 and went on to take $60m (RMB394.6m). However, that was during an earlier stage of the market’s development, when China had fewer screens,...
- 11/30/2020
- by Liz Shackleton
- ScreenDaily
War film “The Sacrifice” was the most watched title in Chinese theaters for the third consecutive weekend. It earned $9.2 million over the frame and extended its cumulative score to $150 million, since release on Oct. 23.
Over the weekend just completed, U.S.-Canadian animation “Paw Patrol: Mighty Pups” bounced its way to second place with a $5.5 million opening.
Millennium Films’ “Hellboy” came in third with a weekend take of $4.6 million, pushing its seven-day score to $10.4 million. That compares with its $21.9 million haul last year in North America.
Fourth place, and a $3.5 million score, belonged “Find Your Voice.” The Hong Kong-u.S.-shot production stars veteran singer-actor-producer Andy Lau as a musical conductor unexpectedly arriving at a college and training the pupils for an inter-collegiate chorus competition.
It edged out long-legged patriotic omnibus film “My People, My Homeland,” which added $3.1 million in its seventh weekend. Its total is now $422 million.
Dropping out...
Over the weekend just completed, U.S.-Canadian animation “Paw Patrol: Mighty Pups” bounced its way to second place with a $5.5 million opening.
Millennium Films’ “Hellboy” came in third with a weekend take of $4.6 million, pushing its seven-day score to $10.4 million. That compares with its $21.9 million haul last year in North America.
Fourth place, and a $3.5 million score, belonged “Find Your Voice.” The Hong Kong-u.S.-shot production stars veteran singer-actor-producer Andy Lau as a musical conductor unexpectedly arriving at a college and training the pupils for an inter-collegiate chorus competition.
It edged out long-legged patriotic omnibus film “My People, My Homeland,” which added $3.1 million in its seventh weekend. Its total is now $422 million.
Dropping out...
- 11/16/2020
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
‘Demon Slayer’ is now the highest-grossing IMAX title ever in Japan.
Demon Slayer breaks IMAX record in Japan
Japanese anime Demon Slayer The Movie: Mugen Train proved reliably robust in its fifth week of release in Japan, dropping just 3% from the previous weekend at its IMAX screens. The IMAX total is now $14.2m, overtaking Bohemian Rhapsody ($13.4m) to become the biggest success on the format in the country.
Across all cinemas, weekend numbers are unconfirmed, but the total for distributors Toho and Aniplex is now estimated at $230m, making Mugen Train (aka Infinity Train) the fifth-biggest film of all time at the Japanese box office,...
Demon Slayer breaks IMAX record in Japan
Japanese anime Demon Slayer The Movie: Mugen Train proved reliably robust in its fifth week of release in Japan, dropping just 3% from the previous weekend at its IMAX screens. The IMAX total is now $14.2m, overtaking Bohemian Rhapsody ($13.4m) to become the biggest success on the format in the country.
Across all cinemas, weekend numbers are unconfirmed, but the total for distributors Toho and Aniplex is now estimated at $230m, making Mugen Train (aka Infinity Train) the fifth-biggest film of all time at the Japanese box office,...
- 11/16/2020
- by Charles Gant
- ScreenDaily
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