Scary Movie 4 is frightfully popular

The old showbiz adage reads, “Give ‘em what they want.” What the US movie-staring public obviously wanted for Easter was fart gags, pop culture riffs and Craig Bierko as “Tom Ryan”, jumping on a coach in a parody of a certain other Tom. Crushing the competition, Scary Movie 4 grabbed $41 million to win the weekend, and snag another of those questionable records - this time, the Biggest Easter Weekend Opening ever in the States. Okay, that’s a little more acceptable than Most Ginger-Haired People Called Steve Watching In Oklahoma.

And it was good news for the Stateside box office in general, as Scary’s success this weekend help to nudge 2006 a whole 4% ahead of last year’s lacklustre takings. So perhaps now all those industry analysts will find something else to write about besides the box office slump.

How about this: Disney’s The Wild bombed the big one. The latest Mouse House ‘toon faces early extinction, opening in fourth – fourth! – place with $9.6 million. It’s the third-worst animated opening ever, behind US hall of shame winner Valiant and Magic Roundabout-renamed tale Doogal. Perhaps all the kids felt they’d already seen The Wild last year, when the tale of zoo animals at large in New York on the hunt for one of their own was called Madagascar. Little bit of satire, ladies and gennulmen…

And the ankle biters were clearly more interested in going back to see Ice Age: The Meltdown, which maintained its winning streak even if the receipts are beginning to melt away a little. Still, $20 million is nothing to be sniffed at for a third weekend’s take, and the film is now up to $147 million in just the US. Third place went to Rob Schneider comedy The Benchwarmers, which grabbed $10 million.

Scooting on further down the charts (everyone wave to The Wild on our way), Take The Lead took fifth with $6.7 million and sixth place was Inside Man. Spike Lee’s heist thriller stole $6.3 million. Seven belonged to Slevin - Lucky Number Slevin, that is (we know, we know, cheesy gag), with the Josh Hartnett-starring crime drama dropping to $4.6 million. Seriously unlucky, that one.

In better health at eighth was Thank You For Smoking, which expanded into more cinemas and took in $4.5 million, despite playing on a fraction of the other films’ screens. The caustic ciggie comedy has smoked out $11.5 million from American cinemagoers, which isn’t bad for a relatively lower-budget movie. And Failure To Launch is still getting them in, making $2.6 million-worth of US film watchers happy. Finally, prepare to say goodbye to V For Vendetta, clinging to the bottom of the charts as it heads off into second-run cinemas and then DVD retirement. It added $2.2 million to its $66 million US total to date.

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. 

Latest in Horror Movies
Emily Blunt in A Quiet Place Part 2
A Quiet Place 3 is finally happening, but it'll be a while because John Krasinski is so busy: "It's hard to get him"
Theo James as Hal in Osgood Perkins' The Monkey
It might only be March, but Stephen King adaptation The Monkey is now the highest grossing horror movie of 2025
Train to Busan passengers
Train to Busan director is returning to the horror sub-genre with a new movie described as the culmination of his zombie universe
John Lithgow as Dave Crealy in The Rule of Jenny Pen
John Lithgow and Geoffrey Rush's twisted chiller is a much-needed shake-up to the horror genre, disrupting harmful elderly stereotypes embraced by the likes of X and The Shining
Kathryn Newton in Abigail
Marvel star joins former Scream directors for highly-anticipated upcoming horror sequel
Mickey 17
Robert Pattinson says he got so scared watching a horror movie that he fell asleep holding two kitchen knives: "I'm too sensitive"
Latest in News
Jordan A. Mun looks at herself in a mirror in just a vest in Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet screenshot
5 years after starting development, Neil Druckmann says Naughty Dog's new game Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet is "still evolving and changing as we're making it"
Silent Hill f
After 2 years of silence, the next mainline Silent Hill game is getting a dedicated stream this week with "the latest news"
Original Xbox console
Former Microsoft exec says the first Xbox was killed early in favor of 360 because it was "losing money left right and center," but luckily "we could afford to hemorrhage cash"
A Monster Hunter Wilds character holding binoculars.
Despite Monster Hunter Wilds suffering monstrous performance problems on PC, it still outsold the PS5 and Xbox Series X versions in the US
Jordan A. Mun looks at herself in a mirror in just a vest in Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet screenshot
The Last of Us creator Neil Druckmann says Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet will also be about "being lonely," as if his zombie apocalypse wasn’t isolating enough: "I really want you to be lost"
A screenshot of Jordan drinking a soda during the reveal trailer for Intergalactic: The Hertic Prophet.
Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet is "a game about faith and religion," which Neil Druckmann jokes will surely get less hate than The Last of Us 2