The USA Weekend Top 10 Box Office Summery (Week of Nov. 30-Dec. 2, 2012).
1. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2
2. Skyfall
3. Rise of the Guardians
4. Lincoln
5. Life of Pi
6. Killing Them Softly
7. Wreck-It Ralph
8. Red Dawn
9. Flight
10. The Collection
Box Office Report: Holdovers Hang On, 'Killing' 'Soft' in Sixth.
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2
With two new nationwide releases—
Killing Them Softly and
The Collection—failing to make any noise at the box office, the post-Thanksgiving weekend lived up its reputation as a dumping ground. As a result, for the third-straight weekend the top three movies were
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2,
Skyfall and
Lincoln. On the strength of those holdovers, the Top 12 earned an estimated $107.5 million, which is up a whopping 46 percent from the same frame last year.
Breaking Dawn Part 2 three-peated with an estimated $17.4 million (off 60 percent). The fifth and final
Twilight movie continues to hang on
slightly better than its predecessors, and with a $254.6 million total it's now within $1 million of catching up to
New Moon.
This was Lionsgate/Summit's 11th weekend this year with a first place movie (four for
Hunger Games, two for
The Expendables 2, two for
The Possession, three for
Twilight). That leads all movie studios for 2012; overall, Lionsgate/Summit has earned $1.22 billion domestically this year, which ranks fourth among all studios.
Skyfall was a close second this weekend with an estimated $17 million, which is down 52 percent from last weekend. So far, the 23rd James Bond adventure has grossed an astounding $246 million, and could wind up as high as $290 million by the end of its run.
Skyfall's impressive grosses helped get Sony to over $1.7 billion on the year, which is a new record for the studio.
In third place,
Lincoln eased 47 percent to an estimated $13.5 million. It has now earned $83.7 million, which is ahead of director
Steven Spielberg's 2011 movies
The Adventures of Tintin ($77.6 million) and
War Horse ($79.9 million).
With its holiday tie-in, DreamWorks Animation's
Rise of the Guardians dipped a light 43 percent this weekend. Unfortunately, it only added $13.5 million for a new total of $48.9 million, and a $100 million total still looks like a long shot.
Life of Pi rounded out the Top Five with an estimated $12 million (down 47 percent). So far, the well-reviewed book adaptation has grossed $48.4 million, and it's likely this movie's ultimate fate will be determined overseas (where it's performing quite well so far).
In sixth place,
Killing Them Softly bombed with just $7 million, which is one of
Brad Pitt's worst openings ever. Still, it is nearly twice as much as Pitt and director
Andrew Dominik's last collaboration,
The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, made in its entire run ($3.9 million). The movie received a terrible "F" CinemaScore, and should fade from theaters very quickly in the next few weeks.
The Collection took 10th place with an estimated $3.41 million from 1,403 locations. That's a bit less than its predecessor,
The Collector, made in its opening weekend in 2009 ($3.57 million).
Silver Linings Playbook remained in fewer than 400 theaters this weekend, but still managed to only dip 24 percent to an estimated $3.3 million. Through 17 days in limited release, the David O. Russell romantic comedy has earned $11 million.
Anna Karenina expanded to 384 locations and grossed $2.23 million. The movie has now earned $4.08 million, and a nationwide expansion would appear to be on the horizon.
In its eighth weekend in theaters,
Argo passed $100 million at the domestic box office. That makes it star
Ben Affleck's first $100 million movie since 2003's
Daredevil. Also, it's the first of the major awards contenders to reach that mark, though
Lincoln is on pace to eclipse
Argo's tally in the coming weeks.