Daily Box Office: Mild Mild West
Playing at 3,304 theaters, Wild Wild West managed to open with just $7.07 million on Wednesday. This means that the picture might not even match my $37.5 million weekend prediction. By comparison, Will Smith's previous July extravaganzas, Men in Black and Independence Day opened with $14.04 and $17.41 million respectively, and that was after having Tuesday night previews. The same time last year, Armageddon opened with $9.67 million and went on to make $36.1 million Friday-to-Sunday (though this was muted due to the Fourth of July falling on a Saturday).
Warner Bros. executives have given the usual spin by saying they are pleased with the opening. But, really, they're not. How could they be? This picture reportedly had a $160-180 million budget. Add in the massive marketing campaign, and the overall cost was probably around $210-230 million. So if the picture continues to perform at this rate, it will be lucky to break even in the long run.
Meanwhile, South Park grossed a strong $4.85 million from 2,128 theaters, giving it a higher per theater average than Wild Wild West. However, since it has more of a cult following it should see an above average drop on Thursday.
Editor's Note: Articles published before 2001 were assigned and reported as box office briefings, not a full evaluation or analysis.
Warner Bros. executives have given the usual spin by saying they are pleased with the opening. But, really, they're not. How could they be? This picture reportedly had a $160-180 million budget. Add in the massive marketing campaign, and the overall cost was probably around $210-230 million. So if the picture continues to perform at this rate, it will be lucky to break even in the long run.
Meanwhile, South Park grossed a strong $4.85 million from 2,128 theaters, giving it a higher per theater average than Wild Wild West. However, since it has more of a cult following it should see an above average drop on Thursday.
Editor's Note: Articles published before 2001 were assigned and reported as box office briefings, not a full evaluation or analysis.