Update!

Will Harry Potter Fail to Live Up to Record Hype?

Since its historic opening weekend, Deathly Hallows: Part 2 has taken to settling for second (or lower) at the domestic box office; is the boy wizard already done?

By Joal Ryan Jul 31, 2011 7:00 AMTags
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UPDATE: The final Harry Potter has become the first Harry Potter to gross $1 billion worldwide, Warner Bros. announced Sunday. So, like we say below, it's good to be the boy who lived.

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Two short weeks ago, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 was the biggest box-office thing ever in Hollywood.

Now, it's getting beat by Captain America.

Is the wizard out of magic—and so soon?

Hardly.

Deathly Hallows: Part 2 just became the first movie to break $900 million after only 15 days in theaters worldwide, Box Office Mojo reported. (The film opened in some foreign countries on July 13.) It's already the Earth's 19th-biggest-ever grosser.

But, domestically, Harry Potter's wand has indeed lost its zip—and lost it fast. 

On these shores, HP8 was at about $298 million through Wednesday. At the same point in its runs, The Dark Knight, which Deathly Hallows: Part 2 blew past to take the opening-weekend record, was at $342.7 million.

How did Harry Potter blow such a big lead?

"Even a huge franchise like this has a ceiling, and the base hasn't expanded that much," BoxOffice.com Phil Contrino said via email.

In other words, Potter fans here rushed to see the franchise's final film the first second (read: weekend) they got, and then after that… Well, let's just say, Twilight fans could tell Potter fans that ginormous debuts don't mean Avatar-toppling runs.

Speaking of the all-time box-office champ…

"[Deathly Hallows: Part 2] doesn't have a shot at Avatar's record," Contrino said.

And no one ever thought it did because Avatar is Avatar: one of those flukes and/or James Cameron movies. (For what it's worth, HP8 is currently running ahead of Avatar's pace.)

Of course, with Deathly Hallows: Part 2 long expected to gross $1 billion worldwide, it's good to be Harry Potter, too.

(Originally published July 30, 2011, at 11 a.m. PT)