Rush Hour 3 speeds to the top of the US box office
While Stardust struggles...
And so the summer of threequels ends not with a bang or a whimper, but with both: a whimper of a movie that managed a small bang at the US box office.
The surely unnecessary – except to New Line’s accountants – Rush Hour 3 stomped over some bad reviews to win the US public’s cinema-going trust and arrived with an estimated $50.2 million, rather less than the second instalment.
That meant The Bourne Ultimatum snuck down one place in its second week, nabbing $33.7 million and pushing its total to $132.3 million, not bad when you consider it cost $110 million to make. That in turn shoved The Simpsons Movie down to third, with Homer and co taking in $11.1 million for a $152.2 million total in the US alone.
Despite some decent – if mixed – reviews, Matthew Vaughn’s fantasy epic Stardust could only manage to launch in fourth place, making $9 million. It’ll need a little more magic than that to earn back its $70 million budget. The top five was rounded out by live-action ‘toon adaptation Underdog, which grabbed $6.5 million, with $24.7 million in its financial kennel thus far.
Heading into the middle of the charts, we find Hairspray sitting pretty in sixth place, with a running total of $92.1 million so far. Seventh place went to I Now Pronounce You Chuck And Larry, with Adam Sandler’s latest making $5.95 million this week for a $103.8 million total. Eighth was Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, which has now made a healthy $272 million in the US alone.
And so to the bottom, where cooking romantic drama No Reservations sits at ninth after showing some weaker-than-expected legs. The Catherine Zeta-Jones film has made $32 million so far. But that’s still better than this week’s third new arrival in 10th – Daddy Day Camp. With America suddenly finding its sense of taste, audiences stayed away from the misfiring comedy sequel, which couldn’t even tempt Eddie Murphy back. Thankfully, there is still a Cuba Gooding Jr in the world and he gamely agreed to lead this one. It made just $3.6 million and that sound Cuba is hearing is the Academy demanding the return of his Oscar right now…
Sign up for the Total Film Newsletter
Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inbox
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.