Ratatouille opens soft and Bruce Dies Hard

Long considered the unstoppable hit machine, Pixar animations’ fortunes took a mild knock last year with the muted opening and critical problems of Cars. Still, the vehicular ‘toon still managed a healthy gross.

So it’s a little disheartening to report that their latest offering - Brad Bird’s foodie flick Ratatouille – didn’t match even Cars’ opening weekend. It is, in fact, the lowest for a Pixar film since A Bug’s Life. That said, the bad news ends there, as the adventures of gourmet rat Remy still managed to win the weekend at the American box office. With $47.2 million, Ratatouille just edged out Bruce Willis’ return to John McClane’s dirty vest (or in the case of Die Hard 4.0, swanky leather jacket), which arrived in second with $33.1 million.

But Bruce is the real champion here – since the fourth Die Hard outing opened on Wednesday, its box office total across the week is actually $48.1 million.

The two big new openers meant that Evan Almighty had to take a hit, and it sank to third place with a 52% drop to make $15 million in its second weekend, running a total of $60 million. It’ll need to go some to make back that alleged $175 million budget.

Fourth place finds spooky hotel horror 1408, which also dropped, but managed to nab $10.6 million, ahead of Fantastic Four sequel Rise Of The Silver Surfer, which fell to fifth with $9 million and a total of $114.8 million so far. There was – once again – better news for Knocked Up, the summer’s hit comedy so far. Judd Apatow’s latest jumped ahead of Ocean’s Thirteen in the charts, making $7.4 million to Danny and the boys’ $6 million. It’s also ahead in terms of total earnings, with Knocked Up boasting $122 million to Ocean’s $102 million. It’s a good summer to be a chubby stoner…

Eighth place went to Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End, which took in $5 million and sees it struggling to reach $300 million. But with a US holiday on the way, chances are it’ll sail slowly over the mark by the end of next week.

Michael Moore staked out ninth for US healthcare doc Sicko. After a limited release, it has expanded into 440 cinemas and a healthy – pardon the pun - $4.5 million for such a comparatively small showing. And finally, also doing well despite being in less than a thousand cinemas was romantic drama Evening, which made $3.5 million.

Next week: They’re robots in disguise and more than meets the eye… But can those Transformers conquer the summer box office?

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The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine. 

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