Update!

Nothing Ugly About Katherine Heigl's Weekend

Grey's Anatomy star's new movie bows with solid $27 million; G-Force takes the weekend crown; Harry Potter takes a plunge

By Joal Ryan Jul 26, 2009 7:23 PMTags
Katherine Heigl, The Ugly TruthColumbia TriStar Marketing Group, Inc./Sony Pictures

So, was Izzie's fate sealed by Katherine Heigl's weekend?

Heigl, whose ultimate future on Grey's Anatomy is one of the small screen's great questions, proved her big-screen worth yet again with an estimated $27 million Friday-Sunday debut for The Ugly Truth.

The romantic comedy, which pairs Heigl with 300's Gerard Butler, took third in the box office standings behind the guinea-pig-powered comedy G-Force ($32.2 million) and the still big but somewhat sapped Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince ($30 million).

Here are some more factoids for Heigl to drop within earshot of an ABC exec:

Not that Heigl or her team need the reminder, but The Ugly Truth is now the year's third-biggest-bowing romantic comedy behind Sandra Bullock's The Proposal and the all-star He's Just Not That Into You.

To put that previous factoid another way, Heigl opened a movie bigger than romantic-comedy stalwarts Kate Hudson (Bride Wars), Matthew McConaughey (Ghosts of Girlfriends Past) and Renée Zellweger (New in Town) did.

As a reminder, Heigl is back at work on Grey's sixth season. But the star to whom the adjective outspoken is typically applied isn't saying what shape her health-challenged character is in.

Harry Potter's ticket sales were off 61 percent from its opening weeked. If estimates hold, that fall will go down as the franchise's second biggest plunge.

In the not-great-news department, the Harry Potter with the franchise's biggest drop, Prisoner of Azkaban, is also the franchise's lowest-grossing movie to date.

In the not-bad-news department, the "lowest-grossing" Prisoner of Azkaban made nearly $250 million domestically.

In the terribly good news department, Half-Blood Prince, after just two weekends, is already at $221.8 million.

The horror movie Orphan, the weekend's other major new release, grossed a respectable $12.8 million for a fourth-place bow.

How low can Brüno go? The Sacha Baron Cohen comedy was down 67 percent from last weekend's near-historic dive, and clung to a Top 10 finish with a $2.7 million take.

After three weekends, Brüno has $56.5 million in the domestic bank—a number that would look bigger if Cohen's Borat wasn't already well on its way to $100 million in the same time frame.

Up exits the Top 10 after eight weekends and a $283.6 million haul that puts it behind only Finding Nemo on the formidable list of all-time Disney/Pixar grossers.

Here's a complete look at the weekend's top-grossing films based on Friday-Sunday estimates as compiled by Exhibitor Relations:

  1. G-Force, $32.2 million
  2. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, $30 million
  3. The Ugly Truth, $27 million
  4. Orphan, $12.8 million
  5. Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, $8.2 million
  6. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, $8 million
  7. The Hangover, $6.5 million
  8. The Proposal, $6.4 million
  9. Public Enemies, $4.2 million
  10. Brüno, $2.7 million

(Originally published July 26, 2009, at 9:17 a.m. PT)

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Get the lowdown on the upcoming Grey's Anatomy season here.