A Fast and Furious $72.5 Mil Weekend

Throwback stars and title revs up franchise to big box-office win

By Joal Ryan Apr 05, 2009 4:31 PMTags
Vin Diesel, Fast and FuriousUniversal Studios

It must have been the thes that were the problem.

Shorn of its franchise's titular articles, Fast and Furious blew away its predecessors and the box-office weekend competition with an estimated $72.5 million Friday-Sunday debut.

The performance was the year's best opening by a mile. It was the car series' biggest by an even longer mile. 

Drilling down into the numbers:

The Furious franchise's previous best was the $50.5 million taken in by 2003's similarly the-lacking 2 Fast 2 Furious.

With the articles, but without either Vin Diesel or Paul Walker, 2006's The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift earned less in its entire run ($62.5 million) than Fast and Furious is expected to gross in 72 hours.

Fast and Furious is the series' first movie to feature Diesel and Walker (and Jordana Brewster and Michelle Rodriquez) since 2001's original The Fast and the Furious.

Overseas, Fast and Furious grossed $30.1 million, bringing its estimated worldwide haul to $102.6 million, Universal said.

Some more Furious factoids: Biggest April opener ever; biggest Universal Friday-Sunday opener ever, topping 1997's Lost World: Jurassic Park, which, granted, made its $72.1 million back before movie tickets cost an arm and two legs; and, per its proud studio, biggest car-driven opener ever, topping even, yes, Cars ($60.1 million).

That Adventureland ($6 million debut) wasn't Superbad ($33.1 million debut) was hardly surprising. That, as far as star-lacking, R-rated comedies go, it wasn't even Beerfest ($7 million) was a touch more so.

Last weekend's No. 1 film, Monsters vs. Aliens ($33.5 million), held well, as animated films tend to do, although not remarkably well, as some animated films tend to do, as well. Ticket sales were down 44 percent.

The reputedly $175 million Monsters vs. Aliens still has a lot of ground to cover its budget domestically. Its two-weekend stateside haul stands at $105.7 million.

Watchmen watch: Out of the Top 10 after four weekends; crawled past the $105 million mark overall, with a $1.1 million Friday-Sunday take; nowhere near enough gas in the tank to match its reported $120-$150 million budget domestically; let the comic-book-movie carping begin. Or, well, continue.

Sunshine Cleaning ($1.9 million) did it. Playing at only 479 theaters, 1,852 fewer than the next-"smallest" Top 10 movie, the Amy Adams indie comedy notched a 10th place finish.

• Liam Neeson's Taken ($1.6 million) exited the Top 10 after a remarkable nine-weekend, $139.5 million run.

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

  1. Fast and Furious, $72.5 million
  2. Monsters vs. Aliens, $33.5 million
  3. The Haunting in Connecticut, $9.6 million
  4. Knowing, $8.1 million
  5. I Love You, Man, $7.9 million
  6. Adventureland, $6 million
  7. Duplicity, $4.3 million
  8. Race to Witch Mountain, $3.4 million
  9. 12 Rounds, $2.3 million
  10. Sunshine Cleaning, $1.9 million

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