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rottenwatch box office:
59% Riddick
72% Lee Daniels' The Butler
60% Instructions Not Included
47% We're the Millers
26% Planes
metacritic box office:
*click pic(s) for source*

*click pic for full list/source*





rottenwatch box office:





metacritic box office:
*click pic(s) for source*
Box Office: ‘Riddick’ Defies Post-Labor Day Slump With $18.7 Mil, Knocks ‘Butler’ to Second Place. Total domestic box office outstrips the same frame last year by roughly 25%
Vin Diesel helped light up what is usually a dark post-Labor Day box office period, with Universal’s franchise pic “Riddick” scoring a solid estimated $18.7 million domestically.
The film claimed the weekend’s No. 1 spot, unseating the Weinstein Co.’s “Lee Daniels’ The Butler,” which fell to second place with $8.9 million. The three-week champ, which fell just 40% in its fourth frame, reached $91.9 million Stateside through Sunday.
Total domestic box office was up over this time last year by roughly 25%, thanks also to a excellent expansion for Lionsgate-Pantelion’s “Instructions Not Included.” The Hispanic-targeted crowdpleaser earned $8.1 million from just 717 locations, up from 384 last weekend, for a Stateside cume now past $20 million.
While “Riddick” defied the post-Labor Day slump, the film still came in on the low-side of expectations. Pic opened with less than its predecessor’s $24 million debut in 2004, but the three-quel outperformed the original film, 2000′s “Pitch Black,” which grossed $11.6 million during opening weekend.
Aside from “The Butler,” which has dominated with adult auds, a few other holdovers continue to hold their ground nicely.
Warner Bros.-New Line’s R-rated hit comedy “We’re the Millers” fell just 38% in its fifth outing, with $7.9 million, lifting its domestic cume to an impressive $123.8 million.
Meanwhile, Sony’s “One Direction: This Is Us” dropped a steep 74% in three days, grossing an estimated $4.1 million. The drop-off is somewhat expected considering how frontloaded the film’s opening was, though similar music docs, including “Justin Bieber” and the Michael Jackson pic, fell just 55% and 43% in the second frames, respectively.
At the specialty box office, Exclusive Media’s drama “Adore,” starring Robin Wright and Naomi Watts, earned a meager $125,400 from 57 locations, averaging just $2,200 per screen. The film played better on non-theatrical platforms, however. Pic debuted in the top 15 on iTunes this weekend.
Vin Diesel helped light up what is usually a dark post-Labor Day box office period, with Universal’s franchise pic “Riddick” scoring a solid estimated $18.7 million domestically.
The film claimed the weekend’s No. 1 spot, unseating the Weinstein Co.’s “Lee Daniels’ The Butler,” which fell to second place with $8.9 million. The three-week champ, which fell just 40% in its fourth frame, reached $91.9 million Stateside through Sunday.
Total domestic box office was up over this time last year by roughly 25%, thanks also to a excellent expansion for Lionsgate-Pantelion’s “Instructions Not Included.” The Hispanic-targeted crowdpleaser earned $8.1 million from just 717 locations, up from 384 last weekend, for a Stateside cume now past $20 million.
While “Riddick” defied the post-Labor Day slump, the film still came in on the low-side of expectations. Pic opened with less than its predecessor’s $24 million debut in 2004, but the three-quel outperformed the original film, 2000′s “Pitch Black,” which grossed $11.6 million during opening weekend.
Aside from “The Butler,” which has dominated with adult auds, a few other holdovers continue to hold their ground nicely.
Warner Bros.-New Line’s R-rated hit comedy “We’re the Millers” fell just 38% in its fifth outing, with $7.9 million, lifting its domestic cume to an impressive $123.8 million.
Meanwhile, Sony’s “One Direction: This Is Us” dropped a steep 74% in three days, grossing an estimated $4.1 million. The drop-off is somewhat expected considering how frontloaded the film’s opening was, though similar music docs, including “Justin Bieber” and the Michael Jackson pic, fell just 55% and 43% in the second frames, respectively.
At the specialty box office, Exclusive Media’s drama “Adore,” starring Robin Wright and Naomi Watts, earned a meager $125,400 from 57 locations, averaging just $2,200 per screen. The film played better on non-theatrical platforms, however. Pic debuted in the top 15 on iTunes this weekend.

*click pic for full list/source*