
High School Musical 2, after all, got 17 million pairs of eyes with its American television premiere. Maybe it was about building the brand, but that seems like a lot of ticket cash foregone to me.
With an average movie-ticket price approaching $7 (according to the National Association of Theatre Owners), the second sequel got about 6 million asses in seats in its opening weekend. Senior Year also topped this week's Box Office Power Rankings by a wide margin, and it was the only release in the top 10 to be Rotten Tomatoes-approved "fresh."
But keep a couple of deflating facts in mind:
- That Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus concert movie from earlier this year drew $31 million its opening weekend on fewer than one-fifth as many screens. And it got better reviews.
- High School Musical 3 had a per-screen average less than $2,000 more than the lowly retread Saw V.
I wouldn't want those damned kids to get even bigger heads.
About Box Office Power Rankings
Box Office Power Rankings balance box office and critical reception to create a better measure of a movie's overall performance against its peers than gross receipts alone.
The weekly rankings cover the 10 top-grossing movies in the United States for the previous weekend. I assign equal weight to box office and critical opinion, with each having two components. The measures are: box-office gross, per-theatre average, Rotten Tomatoes (RottenTomatoes.com) score, and Metacritic (Metacritic.com) score.
Why those four? Box-office gross basically measures the number of people who saw a movie in a given weekend. Per-theatre average corrects for blockbuster-wannabes that flood the market with prints, and gives limited-release movies a fighting chance. Rotten Tomatoes measures critical opinion in a binary way. And Metacritic gives a better sense of critics' enthusiasm (or bile) for a movie.
For each of the four measures, the movies are ranked and assigned points (10 for the best performer, one for the worst). Finally, those points are added up, with a maximum score of 40 and a minimum score of four.
For more Box Office Power Rankings, visit CultureSnob.com/bopr. Culture Snob is the Web site of Reader Managing Editor Jeff Ignatius.
Box Office Power Rankings: October 24-26, 2008 | |||||||
Box Office Ranks | Critics' Ranks | ||||||
Rank | Movie | Last Week | Gross | Per Theater | Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic | Total |
1 | High School Musical 3: Senior Year | - | 10 ($42.0M) | 10 ($11.6K) | 10 (66) | 8 (56) | 38 |
2 | The Secret Life of Bees | 1 | 5 ($6.1M) | 8 ($3.7K) | 8 (58) | 9 (57) | 30 |
3 | W. | 2 | 4 ($5.1M) | 7 ($2.5K) | 7 (56) | 8 (56) | 26 |
4 | Pride and Glory | - | 6 ($6.3M) | 6 ($2.4K) | 4 (36) | 5 (45) | 21 |
5 | Saw V | - | 9 ($30.1M) | 9 ($9.8K) | 1 (13) | 1 (19) | 20 |
5 | Body of Lies | 4 | 2 ($4.1M) | 2 ($1.9K) | 6 (50) | 10 (58) | 20 |
7 | Beverly Hills Chihuahua | 5 | 7 ($6.9M) | 4 ($2.2K) | 5 (41) | 3 (41) | 19 |
8 | Quarantine | 6 | 1 ($2.6M) | 1 ($1.2K) | 9 (59) | 6 (53) | 17 |
8 | Max Payne | 7 | 8 ($7.6M) | 5 ($2.2K) | 2 (19) | 2 (31) | 17 |
10 | Eagle Eye | 8 | 3 ($5.1M) | 3 ($2.0K) | 3 (28) | 4 (43) | 13 |