Box Office

Furious 7 stomps it at box office

Film Title: Furious 7

(L to R) Dom Toretto (VIN DIESEL) faces off against Deckard Shaw (JASON STATHAM) in "Furious 7". Continuing the global exploits in the unstoppable franchise built on speed, James Wan directs this chapter of the hugely successful series.

Photo Credit: Scott Garfield

Copyright: © 2015 Universal Studios. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Film Title: Furious 7 (L to R) Dom Toretto (VIN DIESEL) faces off against Deckard Shaw (JASON STATHAM) in "Furious 7". Continuing the global exploits in the unstoppable franchise built on speed, James Wan directs this chapter of the hugely successful series. Photo Credit: Scott Garfield Copyright: © 2015 Universal Studios. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

LOS ANGELES -- Furious 7 set box-office records and raced to No. 1 with about a $147 million domestic opening.

The film marks the biggest debut for the Universal franchise, which has so far racked up more than $2 billion worldwide. It also becomes the ninth-biggest debut in box-office history and set a record for an April weekend, surpassing Spider-Man 3's $151 million bow in 2007.

Fueled by the robust opening of Furious 7, the overall weekend box office will total roughly $218 million, beating the record of $177.6 million set on 2010's Easter weekend. The box office is up about 31 percent from the same weekend last year and 6.4 percent year-to-date.

The latest Fast and Furious installment played in 4,004 North American theaters for a per-theater average of $36,760. On IMAX, the film grossed $14 million on 365 screens in U.S. and Canadian theaters for a very strong per-screen average of $38,000.

Overseas, the film made $240.4 million, giving Universal its highest-grossing international weekend by a large margin (not adjusting for inflation). To date, that brings the film's global total to $384 million.

"Looking at the worldwide result is kind of a humbling experience," said Nicholas Carpou, Universal's head of domestic distribution. "People really have a tremendous interest in the latest saga. It's great to watch this franchise develop the way it has so far."

It is the third-highest-grossing international opening of all time, behind Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows: Part 2 ($314 million opening in July 2011) and Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides ($260.4 million opening in May 2011).

"There are a lot of franchises that are enjoying international box-office success. We happen to be one that's original," Carpou said, noting that the films are not adaptations based on books or rides.

Directed by franchise newcomer James Wan, Furious 7 takes the ensemble (including Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Chris Ludacris Bridges, Jason Statham, Dwayne Johnson and Michelle Rodriguez) around the globe from London to Los Angeles, Tokyo, the Dominican Republic and Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, and back to Los Angeles.

Dominic Toretto (played by Diesel) and the crew go after Deckard Shaw (Statham) for targeting and killing crew members as revenge for the death of his brother, Owen Shaw.

"Social outreach was huge from the beginning with the first trailer," Carpou said of the film's marketing campaign. "There's no way that people wouldn't know this film was coming and that there was this next huge chapter about to unleash on the world."

But the latest film, which cost $190 million to make, hit some unexpected and very big bumps in the road. The release date was shifted from summer 2014 after franchise star Paul Walker died in a car accident midway through production.

Caleb Walker and Cody Walker, Paul's brothers, were brought in as stand-ins. Computer effects were also used for facial replacement to complete Walker's remaining scenes.

"This movie is more than a movie," Diesel said at the film's Los Angeles premiere last week. "You'll feel it when you see it. There's something emotional that happens to you where you walk out of this movie and you appreciate everyone you love. Because you never know the last day when you are going to see them."

Like the cast, the franchise's fervent fan base is very diverse. Moviegoers of all demographics went to theaters in masses to see the installment and pay tribute to Walker.

The audience for the action film was largely over the age of 25 (56 percent). The gender breakdown was fairly even, with male moviegoers making up about 51 percent of the audience. About 37 percent was Hispanic, 25 percent was white, 24 percent was black, 10 percent Asian and 4 percent was other.

There were no other general release newcomers at the box office. But last weekend's No. 1 film, DreamWorks Animation's Home, dropped 47 percent, to second, adding about $27 million. The film, released by 20th Century Fox, has made about $95.2 million in the United States and Canada to date.

The animated feature follows a teenage girl, Tip, who meets and befriends an alien fugitive, Boov. The two set off on a quest to find Tip's mother. The film's voice cast includes Rihanna, Jim Parsons, Jennifer Lopez and Steve Martin.

Coming in at third, Kevin Hart and Will Ferrell's comedy Get Hard, which fell 62 percent from its debut the previous weekend, added about $13 million. Its total domestic haul is $57.2 million to date.

Disney's live action Cinderella stayed strong in its fourth weekend at No. 4, adding about $10.2 million. The film has pulled in $167.1 million domestically.

Rounding out the top five, Lionsgate's The Divergent Series: Insurgent added about $10 million to its box-office total. The dystopian teen film, based on the books by Veronica Roth, has made $103.5 million domestically to date.

Indie horror film It Follows took in about $2.5 million after expanding to additional theaters. It landed at No. 6, down 35 percent from the previous weekend.

The movie, from Weinstein Co.'s Radius-TWC label and Dimension Films, has benefited from positive word of mouth and a Rotten Tomatoes positive rating of 95 percent. It has grossed about $8.6 million to date.

In limited release, Weinstein Co. debuted Woman in Gold in 258 theaters. The film came in at seventh with about $2 million, making its per-screen average a solid $8,107.

Also in limited release, A24's dramatic comedy While We're Young expanded to 34 theaters from the previous weekend. The film, which stars Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts, earned $483,688 for a per-theater average of $14,226.

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:

  1. Furious 7, Universal, $147,187,040, 4,004 locations, $36,760 average, $147,187,040, one week.

  2. Home, 20th Century Fox, $27,011,303, 3,801 locations, $7,106 average, $95,241,397, two weeks.

  3. Get Hard, Warner Bros., $13,128,219, 3,212 locations, $4,087 average, $57,215,636, two weeks.

  4. Cinderella, Disney, $10,178,750, 3,404 locations, $2,990 average, $167,139,868, four weeks.

  5. The Divergent Series: Insurgent, Lionsgate, $10,126,715, 3,442 locations, $2,942 average, $103,511,529, three weeks.

  6. It Follows, Radius-TWC, $2,513,459, 1,655 locations, $1,519 average, $8,589,144, four weeks.

  7. Woman in Gold, The Weinstein Co., $2,091,551, 258 locations, $8,107 average, $2,187,302, one week.

  8. Kingsman: The Secret Service, 20th Century Fox, $1,808,652, 1,327 locations, $1,363 average, $122,366,182, eight weeks.

  9. Do You Believe?, Pure Flix, $1,544,423, 1,218 locations, $1,268 average, $9,855,236, three weeks.

  10. The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Fox Searchlight, $1,079,747, 1,060 locations, $1,019 average, $30,140,329, five weeks.

  11. Run All Night, Warner Bros., $635,146, 1,015 locations, $626 average, $25,298,235, four weeks.

  12. American Sniper, Warner Bros., $628,060, 623 locations, $1,008 average, $346,386,489, 15 weeks.

  13. McFarland, USA, Disney, $618,631, 703 locations, $880 average, $41,774,129, seven weeks.

  14. While We're Young, A24 Films, $483,688, 34 locations, $14,226 average, $789,041, two weeks.

  15. Focus, Warner Bros., $448,150, 625 locations, $717 average, $52,824,772, six weeks.

  16. The Gunman, Open Road, $385,194, 1,027 locations, $375 average, $10,089,669, three weeks.

  17. Danny Collins, Bleecker Street, $347,815, 83 locations, $4,191 average, $735,393, three weeks.

  18. Detective Byomkesh Bakshi, Yash Raj Films, $338,637, 82 locations, $4,130 average, $338,637, one week.

  19. The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water, Paramount, $253,506, 482 locations, $526 average, $160,839,111, nine weeks.

  20. Fifty Shades of Grey, Universal, $245,890, 375 locations, $656 average, $165,463,125, eight weeks.

MovieStyle on 04/10/2015

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