Batman, the Unbeaten

Dark Knight tops weekend box office for third weekend; should pass $400 million on Monday or Tuesday

By Joal Ryan Aug 03, 2008 4:57 PMTags
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The Dark Knight isn't king of the world, but it's getting closer.

The fastest-grossing blockbuster in Hollywood history took in another $43.8 million at the weekend box office, per studio estimates, staying on course for a potential run of $500 million—or more.

The latest Mummy movie, The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon, did about what was expected, if a little less than the most outsized predictions, coming up with $42.5 million. If estimates hold, it'll finish second behind The Dark Knight.

For The Dark Knight now, it's not so much about where it places—although it's the first movie since 2007's Disturbia to top the box office three straight weekends—but how fast it movie descends the mountain of money it made in its opening days.

If it comes down from the peak gradually—and it was down only 42 percent this weekend—it could become only the second film, after Titanic, to break $500 million at the domestic box office.

Much sooner than that will come the $400 million milestone.

With the movie currently sitting on about $394.9 million, Warner Bros. executive Jeff Goldstein said The Dark Knight should enter the $400 million realm by Monday or Tuesday.

"What happens after this is only a guess," Goldstein said today.

One thing Goldstein wasn't banking on was his studio's movie threatening Titanic and its $601 million all-time record.

"That's so far out of the realm," Goldstein said, "it's not even on our radar."

Movies that should be on The Dark Knight's radar are Spider-Man, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Star Wars: Episode IThe Phantom Menace, E.T., Shrek 2 and Star Wars, the six current members of Hollywood's $400 million club.

With The Dark Knight expected to reach $400 million in record time, a mere 18 or 19 days into release, one or more of those kingpins could be dropped down a place on the all-time list as the Batman movie continues its climb.

One record at a time.

Here's a recap of the top-grossing weekend films based on Friday-Sunday estimates compiled by Exhibitor Relations:

  1. The Dark Knight, $43.8 million
  2. The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon, $42.5 million
  3. Step Brothers, $16.3 million
  4. Mamma Mia!, $13.1 million
  5. Journey to the Center of the Earth, $6.9 million
  6. Swing Vote, $6.3 million
  7. Hancock, $5.2 million
  8. WALL-E, $4.7 million
  9. The X-Files: I Want to Believe, $3.4 million
  10. Space Chimps, $2.8 million

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