Scott Mendelson

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Why The Avengers' $207m Opening Weekend Is Even More Impressive Than You Think

Posted: 05/07/2012 12:49 pm

Ten years ago, Spider-Man shocked the industry by grossing more than $100 million in a single weekend.  Five years ago, Spider-Man 3 broke the $150 million weekend barrier.  This weekend, The Avengers has blown through the $200 million barrier, delivering a record opening weekend of $207.1 million in high style.  Yes, the number is beyond huge, besting Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part II by $38 million.  But the total weekend number only tells part of the story.  Arguably as important as the massive three-day figure is the manner in which it was earned.

First of all, The Avengers is the first film in modern times (going back to Batman 23 years ago) to break the opening weekend record without shattering the opening day record.  Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part II still holds the record for the biggest single day, biggest opening day, and biggest Friday with $91 million.  The Avengers earned a massive $80 million on its first Friday, good for the second-highest single day of all time.  But for the last several years, massive opening weekends of this nature have been predicated on overly front-loaded opening days, in turn predicated on front-loaded midnight showings.  Harry Potter 7.2 made $43 million at midnight alone, or 25 percent of its $169 weekend total.  The Hunger Games did 12 percent of its $152 million debut at midnight.  Twilight Saga: New Moon did 18 percent of its $142 million debut at midnight alone.  The Avengers did just 9 percent of its gross, or $18.7 million, at midnight. This means that the film played obscenely well all weekend, not just on opening day for frenzied fans.



In terms of single-day records, The Avengers actually did break one Friday record, as it made $61 million not-counting midnight screenings, crushing the $49 million 'regular business hours' Friday grosses of Spider-Man 3, The Dark Knight, and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part II.  It handedly broke both the Saturday and Sunday records by wide margins.  The Avengers actually made more on Saturday ($69 million) than it did during 'normal business hours' on Friday, besting Spider-Man 3's $51 million Saturday record.  And while final figures could change, The Avengers grossed $59 million on Sunday, crushing the $43 million earned by The Dark Knight on its first Sunday.  The Avengers did not have a sub-2.0x weekend multiplier like the last Harry Potter film, or the barely-2.0x multiplier like the last couple Twilight films, and The Hunger Games.  The Avengers pulled a rock-solid 2.57x weekend multiplier.  That's the kind of consistency you rarely find with big opening weekends, let alone monstrous record-setters like this.  The film earned an A+ from Cinemascore, and these numbers bare that out. The picture played 50 percent over/under 25 years old and 60 percent male.  It earned a surprising 52 percent of its gross in 3D ticket sales with 8 percent of that being from IMAX.  So yes, even without the 3D bump, it still would have set a new opening weekend record (around $175 million, although theoretical 2D IMAX showings would have had the same 'bump' as 3D IMAX showings). And yes even with inflation factored in, the film sold more tickets over its opening weekend than any other film ever (26.5 million tickets, about 3.5 million more than The Dark Knight).   The Avengers played all weekend to packed houses all day and night for audiences of all shapes and sizes.  And, if only judging by my Twitter feed, there was lots of repeat business just over the weekend.



I may have token issues with the film in terms of its worth as a piece of art (non-spoiler review and spoiler discussion).  But as a big-budget spectacle rooted in characters worth cheering for, the picture absolutely delivers the kind of popcorn entertainment that these kind of films often fail to deliver.  Marvel did the groundwork over the last four years, releasing stand-alone films that introduced most of these heroes in their solo adventures, and this was the glorious pay-off.  This was the first Marvel film distributed by Disney, as Paramount sold the rights to their Marvel characters to the Mouse House back in 2010.  While I may carp about the quality of the marketing materials (mediocre trailers, hilariously photo-shopped posters), they did take the time and money to guarantee curiosity and awareness, while the film's quality was the most potent tool in creating interest outside of the die-hards, as Disney correctly screened the film early and often to create a typhoon of buzz heading into its domestic debut.  Opening weekend is usually more about marketing than the quality of the film, but the consistent numbers clearly show that the film's quality was a key component of the marketing campaign.  Still, if I may, I'd like to take a moment to remember the stellar marketing work that Paramount has done with the prior five films, starting with marketing a B-level hero (Iron Man) to a $100 million debut four years ago.  They sold Thor despite having little buzz-worthy footage and managed the tricky feat of turning Captain America into a global blockbuster.  Disney deserves plenty of credit for this weekend's debut, but let's not let Paramount become the Chris Columbus of Marvel marketing efforts (although Paramount will get their share of Avengers movie too).



Oh yeah, the film continued to burn up the foreign charts too, and the film now has $648 million worldwide, good for the top-grossing worldwide earner of 2012 (it will probably surpass The Hunger Games's domestically within a week, so I was wrong on that count).  How high it climbs is a complete mystery at this point.  The strong weekend multiplier, the rousing audience reactions, the strong replay value, and the comparative lack of competition over the next month (sorry Battleship... you're officially sunk) leaves the field open for a huge sprint.  In twelve days worldwide, it has outgrossed every prior Marvel movie on a worldwide scale outside of the first three Spider-Man films.  It outgrossed the domestic totals of The Incredible Hulk, Thor, and Captain America in three days.  In just three days, it is the 12th-highest grossing comic book film of all-time in America, and will surpass 300 ($210 million), and X2 ($214 million) tomorrow while passing X-Men: The Last Stand ($234 million), Men In Black ($250 million), and Batman ($251 million) by Tuesday or Wednesday.  This isn't a guarantee, but if it can hold up and weather what should be a solid debut for Tim Burton's Dark Shadows, we *could* see the first $100 million second-weekend and a ten-day total dangerously close to $400 million.  Again, it's not just the three-day figure, but the manner in which it was earned.  This is no quick-kill blockbuster that dies off after the hardcore fans see it over opening weekend. Even a somewhat healthy 2.5x weekend-to-final gross multiplier gets the film a $517 million domestic total while a 3x multiplier has it flirting with besting Titanic's original theatrical release with $621 million (these pesky 3D reissues make everything more complicated). If it performs like The Dark Knight (3.3x multiplier), it ends with a stunning $683 million.  We'll know more next weekend, but for now, this is an incredible weekend performance by a film that was rewarded for delivering exactly what it promised.



For a look at the history of the opening weekend record-breaker, go HERE.



Scott Mendelson

 

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10:25 AM on 05/08/2012
Adjust these movies for inflation, and then we can discuss it more on an even level with older films.
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Scott Mendelson
Film critic/pundit for Mendelson's Memos, Valley S
12:21 PM on 05/08/2012
All due respect, what part of '3.5 million more tickets sold than any other opening weekend ever' (actually 4 million more tickets, my bad) did you not understand?
11:31 PM on 05/09/2012
C'mon, Scott, you know better than that. Superwide openings on thousands of screens is only something that had happened over the last twenty years or so. E.T. - which held the domestic gross record for 15 years, longer than Titanic - opened in 1101 screens and never even broke the 2000 screen mark.
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CreepyThinMan
More dapper than Don Draper.
09:07 AM on 05/08/2012
The reason why it's an impressive feat is not due to monetary reasons but it shows that a studio that focuses on quality will always make money.
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Fullbrigades
I am too stupid to insult!
02:10 AM on 05/08/2012
I am proud to have contributed to that 200.7 million.. Will probably do it a few more times.. Sadly all IMAX shows were sold out..
by the way, am I the only one who finds the gorgeous Scarlett Johanson standing with a handgun while the others are packing some real superpowers silly???
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CreepyThinMan
More dapper than Don Draper.
09:08 AM on 05/08/2012
I'd be soo distracted by her boobs that she'd probably kill me before my drool hit the floor.
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Scott Mendelson
Film critic/pundit for Mendelson's Memos, Valley S
12:23 PM on 05/08/2012
It is a bit silly, and it's not just her. Really, among the would-be Avengers, only Thor, Iron Man, and The Hulk would qualify as 'super-powered'. Even Captain America is basically a somewhat stronger/faster soldier in a colorful suit. I mentioned this in my review, but the prominence of regular heroes like Black Widow and Hawkeye in the climax only made it more odd that someone didn't call War Machine or that the other SHIELD agents didn't make more of an effort to join the final battle.
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inapickle
10:36 PM on 05/07/2012
I think it will have real legs. Tons of people who want to see it, but weren't up for the crowds, will see it in the next two weeks. I'm not a huge fan of comic book movies and if I see them it's almost always on video, but I'll go see this one. I talked to several friends about it over the weekend, and while everyone said they planned on seeing it, they also all said they'd see it after the opening weekend. Suggests to me there will be a steady tide of people going soon.
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
09:58 PM on 05/07/2012
"and these numbers bare that out" Unless you mean to uncover the numbers it's spelled 'bear' and as in a load bearing wall. (I had to look that up to make sure.)
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Scott Mendelson
Film critic/pundit for Mendelson's Memos, Valley S
02:11 PM on 05/08/2012
I always mess that up. Next time I will triple-check.
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Jonas Planck
The future is not what you were expecting.
08:28 PM on 05/07/2012
I am continually irked by this tendency of people to judge films by their monetary yield. It's as if art itself has become a popularity contest rather than a form of creative expression. I happen to think John Carter was really well done, a loyal retelling of a classic tale, that didn't compromise itself to draw in theoretical demographic groups or pander to advertisers, and yet the only reviews were, "it's a flop. Didn't make enough money." And now we have this "tentpole" film that, while arguably well made and entertaining, is really nothing more than a retelling of a hastily drawn Marvel annual comic from the 1970s (they got MY money, so who cares, right?) and we see the same reviewers fawning over it like it's the second coming of Christ. I'm glad that Joss Whedon will finally have some clout after this, but really, the lack of any actual CRITIQUES among the critics is appalling. It's as if our society has decided that money is only concern, in every situation, regardless of any other concerns, and that attitude is the source of most of our problems.
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Scott Mendelson
Film critic/pundit for Mendelson's Memos, Valley S
12:47 AM on 05/08/2012
If only I had written a whole separate 1800 word review of the film, prior to its release, where I went into detail as to why the film was good but not great. Oh right... http://scottalanmendelson.blogspot.com/2012/04/review-with-terrific-character.html
12:15 PM on 05/08/2012
Your review of the film was spot on in my opinion. I really enjoyed the movie, and will probably go see it again(not something I often do) but there were certain elements to it that keep me from call it a perfect movie. For me, when it comes to comic book movies, The Dark Knight was is still is the best because it has a perfect balance of action and drama and humor and the plot is solid and very compelling.
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02:32 AM on 05/08/2012
Did you read the review in Salon?
http://www.salon.com/2012/05/02/the_avengers_and_hollywoods_gender_wars/singleton/
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Scott Mendelson
Film critic/pundit for Mendelson's Memos, Valley S
12:27 PM on 05/08/2012
I don't disagree with the general thesis (wrote about this myself last year - http://scottalanmendelson.blogspot.com/2011/12/hes-complex-shes-bitch-double-standard.html), but The Avengers is an example of action fantasy done right. Neither of the major female characters are remotely sexualized, nor are their intelligence and physical abilities commented on or considered remotely note-worthy. Plus, and this is a nice touch, pretty much half of the SHIELD agents that we see onscreen are female (again, done without commentary or emphasis).
08:11 PM on 05/07/2012
I understand why they keep hyping record box office dollar numbers, but it really is bogus. What with movie ticket prices and population constantly increasing, more dollars spent are inevitable. The real measure of a film's popularity would be the number of tickets sold adjusted for population.
09:50 PM on 05/07/2012
Read the article first: "And yes even with inflation factored in, the film sold more tickets over its opening weekend than any other film ever (26.5 million tickets, about 3.5 million more than The Dark Knight)."
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inapickle
10:29 PM on 05/07/2012
He did mention it, but the post was number heavy- "26.5 million tickets, about 3.5 million more than The Dark Knight" Gone With the Wind will always win as a percentage of population over the entire original release period. Can't imagine it could ever get knocked off.
11:42 PM on 05/09/2012
I've never really liked Gone With The Wind, but its success is staggering. It's estimated to have sold 225 million
tickets - and keep in mind that it is a nearly four hour movie.

I've always thought, however, that the movie that has been seen by more people than any other has to be Wizard Of Oz due to its annual TV airings.
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07:50 PM on 05/07/2012
Compare ticket sales rather than receipts.
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inapickle
10:29 PM on 05/07/2012
He did- 26.5 million tickets, about 3.5 million more than The Dark Knight
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Scott Mendelson
Film critic/pundit for Mendelson's Memos, Valley S
12:48 AM on 05/08/2012
"And yes even with inflation factored in, the film sold more tickets over its opening weekend than any other film ever (26.5 million tickets, about 3.5 million more than The Dark Knight)." Read the whole article next time...
07:46 PM on 05/07/2012
I enjoyed it

Hulk smash!!!
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drunkarate
07:34 PM on 05/07/2012
I'm all for this analysis if it increases the chances of Joss Whedon gets complete creative control of his own projects!
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getoffthecross
I take social satire seriously...
07:12 PM on 05/07/2012
I have a fellow comic-geek friend whose son was having his birthday party last weekend. Unable to see it at any point, he bought tickets for the two of us for his first available night, which means I'll be seeing it a third time tomorrow. I have another friend who thought that would be a good time to see it for his second time, and asked me if he could join. Turns out he can't. It's a special engagement/reserved ticket showing (for some reason) and it's sold out. "Tuesday night at seven?" I couldn't believe it. And I almost literally can't wait. Not since Star Wars. Joss Whedon = Genius
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ConfuciusSay-
Aglets: their purpose is sinister.
06:18 PM on 05/07/2012
Loved this movie. Saw it twice. Will probably go again, when the crowds die down next week. It's not Shakespeare, nor is it supposed to be.
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dvmweb1984
Thinking, ..thinking.
05:53 PM on 05/07/2012
It is/was great entertainment. I really liked it. It's all about the heroes. Nothing more, nothing less. I thought Ironman was a hoot. Didn't seem to last 2:20 hours.
05:45 PM on 05/07/2012
it was good.

I didnt like robert downey challenging Captain Americas leadership. But other than that it was good.
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jabbaciv
So it goes.
05:43 PM on 05/07/2012
I saw Avengers with my wife and a friend on Saturday night.

My wife liked it so much she insisted we see it again Sunday, and so we did.

That's impressive.