Box Office

Street sequel jumps to the top

Jonah Hill (from left), Ice Cube and Channing Tatum star in 22 Jump Street. The film came in first at last weekend’s box office and made about $57 million.
Jonah Hill (from left), Ice Cube and Channing Tatum star in 22 Jump Street. The film came in first at last weekend’s box office and made about $57 million.

LOS ANGELES -- The property value on Jump Street just increased significantly.

22 Jump Street, Columbia's R-rated follow-up to the successful 2012 buddy comedy 21 Jump Street, topped the domestic box office with $57 million over the weekend, according to estimates from its distributor.

The film, which played to an evenly split male-versus-female audience, averaged a strong $17,263 per theater in wide release. It looks to be helping Columbia reverse last summer's bad fortunes brought on by flops White House Down and After Earth.

"When you have stars like Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum who have such great chemistry together, it just pays off in a big way," said Rory Bruer, distribution head at Columbia, which co-produced the film with MGM.

The $50 million production features Tatum and Hill reprising their roles as underachieving police officers who are sent undercover, this time at a local college. The end credits spoof Hollywood's appetite for franchises, but why wouldn't Columbia want to bank on it? Bruer welcomed the idea: "I think audiences would definitely want to see these guys together again."

The original Jump Street opened at $36.3 million and went on to gross $138 million in U.S. and Canadian theaters and more than $200 million globally. The sequel stands as one of the best openings for an R-rated comedy, second only to The Hangover Part II in 2011 with $85.9 million.

Audience members, 56 percent of whom were younger than 25, and critics were in agreement: The movie earned an A-minus from audience polling firm CinemaScore and an 83 percent positive rating from critic aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.

As with 22 Jump Street, the other major sequel opening over the weekend, Fox and DreamWorks Animation's How to Train Your Dragon 2, had been projected to debut in the $55 million range. The 3-D computer-animated fantasy was given a minor edge because it was released in 900 more theaters and had the benefit of being the summer's first major animated film.

But the young Viking named Hiccup and his dragon Toothless were defeated, landing at No. 2 at the box office. The family film opened to about $49 million in the United States and Canada, according to estimates from its distributor.

"Any time you have a PG animated film and you go against a hard R film, that's a pretty good place to be because they are really different audiences," said Chris Aronson, head of domestic distribution for 20th Century Fox. "There was a lot of chatter prerelease about us being neck-and-neck with 22 Jump Street, but frankly, we knew they were going to be ahead of us."

Playing in 4,253 theaters, one of the largest rollouts ever for an animated film, Dragon 2 took in an average of $11,627 per screen.

The film, which saw the return of Dean DeBlois as director, won over critics and received an A from CinemaScore. This installment follows Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) and his BFF dragon as they try to save the world from the power-obsessed Drago. The voice cast includes Cate Blanchett, Craig Ferguson and, coincidentally, Hill.

It outperformed the 2010 debut of the original, which opened to $43.7 million in U.S. and Canadian theaters and ended its global run with $495 million.

The animated film, which cost $145 million, is on track to beat the original, with little animated competition to contend with this summer. Dragon 2 will open in 20 international markets this weekend, including Russia -- offering a respite to all the World Cup viewings.

Taking third place was Disney's Maleficent, which brought in $18.5 million in its third weekend, bringing its total to $163 million in the United States and Canada.

That kept Tom Cruise's actioner Edge of Tomorrow farther at bay in the No. 4 spot in its second week. The Warner Bros. film took in $16.5 million, bringing its North American total to $57 million.

June 6's box office champ, Fox's teen tear-jerker The Fault in Our Stars, took in about $15 million -- a drop of more than 65 percent in its second week. Don't cry for the film too much, though. It has already recouped its $12-million price tag, and its U.S. and Canada box office total is at $80.8 million.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The top 20 movies at U.S. and Canadian theaters Friday through Sunday, followed by distribution studio, gross, number of theater locations, average receipts per location, total gross and number of weeks in release, as compiled Monday by Rentrak, are:

  1. 22 Jump Street, Columbia, $57,071,445, 3,306 locations, $17,263 average, $57,071,445, 1 week.

  2. How to Train Your Dragon 2, 20th Century Fox, $49,451,322, 4,253 locations, $11,627 average, $49,451,322, 1 week.

  3. Maleficent, Disney, $18,504,997, 3,623 locations, $5,108 average, $163,021,529, 3 weeks.

  4. Edge of Tomorrow, Warner Bros., $16,527,215, 3,505 locations, $4,715 average, $57,001,698, 2 weeks.

  5. The Fault in Our Stars, 20th Century Fox, $14,791,933, 3,273 locations, $4,519 average, $80,767,200, 2 weeks.

  6. X-Men: Days Of Future Past, 20th Century Fox, $9,816,449, 3,042 locations, $3,227 average, $206,256,610, 4 weeks.

  7. Godzilla, Warner Bros., $3,311,185, 2,088 locations, $1,586 average, $191,457,194, 5 weeks.

  8. A Million Ways to Die In the West, Universal, $3,246,400, 2,413 locations, $1,345 average, $37,107,020, 3 weeks.

  9. Neighbors, Universal, $2,369,250, 1,896 locations, $1,250 average, $143,022,215, 6 weeks.

  10. Chef, Open Road, $2,187,526, 1,102 locations, $1,985 average, $13,987,980, 6 weeks.

  11. Blended, Warner Bros., $1,739,108, 1,581 locations, $1,100 average, $40,387,337, 4 weeks.

  12. The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Columbia, $953,927, 682 locations, $1,399 average, $198,386,221, 7 weeks.

  13. Million Dollar Arm, Disney, $804,423, 577 locations, $1,394 average, $33,471,302, 5 weeks.

  14. Alone Yet Not Alone, Hammond Entertainment, $534,626, 103 locations, $5,191 average, $534,626, 38 weeks.

  15. Belle, Fox Searchlight, $510,282, 338 locations, $1,510 average, $8,569,624, 7 weeks.

  16. Rio 2, 20th Century Fox, $415,628, 383 locations, $1,085 average, $126,666,670, 10 weeks.

  17. Words and Pictures, Roadside Attractions, $394,064, 216 locations, $1,824 average, $1,065,352, 4 weeks.

  18. Divergent, Lionsgate, $382,468, 336 locations, $1,138 average, $149,621,275, 13 weeks.

  19. Heaven Is for Real, Columbia, $334,518, 532 locations, $629 average, $89,402,432, 9 weeks.

  20. Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Disney, $274,842, 223 locations, $1,232 average, $256,334,467, 11 weeks.

MovieStyle on 06/20/2014

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