Skip to main content

Box office hits and misses: New movies flop while The Martian stays strong

weekend box office results the martian movie 0021
20th Century Fox
October is typically a slow month for movies, but this weekend managed to be one of the slowest of the year with only one major new release breaking the $5 million mark and four returning films remaining at the top of the box-office rankings.

Ridley Scott’s The Martian remained the most popular movie in theaters right now with a weekend tally of $11.4 million, putting it in the top spot for a fourth weekend. The celebrated adaptation of Andy Weir’s novel about an astronaut stranded on Mars has now been the top movie for four out of the last five weeks, and doesn’t appear to losing much momentum at all — although its box-office dominance could have as much to do with the competition as it does with quality of the film itself.

Recommended Videos

Still, The Martian is doing remarkably well so far, and currently ranks as the ninth highest-grossing film of the year in U.S. theaters and the 12th highest-grossing film of the year worldwide. This weekend, the film was followed in the box-office rankings by family-friendly scary movie Goosebumps ($10.2 million), Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks’ Cold War thriller Bridge of Spies ($8 million), and another family-friendly feature, the animated sequel Hotel Transylvania 2 ($5.8 million).

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The only new movie to squeak into the top five films of the weekend was Bradley Cooper’s cooking comedy Burnt, which earned a meager $5 million for its opening weekend. The film’s premiere is one of the worst for Cooper, who had another flop earlier this year with the drama Aloha.

In sixth place, Vin Diesel’s supernatural fantasy The Last Witch Hunter added another $4.7 million to its box-office gross over the weekend, bringing its total in U.S. theaters to $18.6 million and its international gross to $38.4 million. Diesel’s films tend to do well overseas, so even though the numbers are pretty underwhelming so far, there’s still a decent chance that it could cover its production costs or possibly even turn a small profit.

In a somewhat similar situation is the franchise-ending Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension, which ended up in seventh place for the weekend with $3.45 million. Extremely low production costs have been a hallmark of the Paranormal Activity movies, and so the $13.5 million the film has earned in the U.S. and the $37.8 million it’s earned internationally aren’t as disappointing as they would be for most major releases. The film will almost certainly cover its costs and very likely make a profit, but the returns certainly aren’t going to be as huge as they were for the first few films in the found-footage series.

Sliding into eighth place for the weekend is Sandra Bullock’s new film, Our Brand Is Crisis, about an American political consultant (Bullock) who’s tasked with helping a Bolivian politician win the 2002 presidential election. The film earned just $3.43 million in its first weekend in theaters — which not only gives it the worst opening of any film starring Bullock, but also gives its one of the worst opening weekends of all time for a film in wide release. Ouch.

The rest of the weekend’s ten highest-grossing films included Guillermo del Toro’s gothic haunted-house movie Crimson Peak ($3.1 million) and the poor-performing biopic Steve Jobs ($2.58 million), which is on pace to earn only slightly more than the much-maligned 2013 film that cast Ashton Kutcher as the Apple co-founder, Jobs. Although the film seemed to have all kinds of Oscar buzz a few months ago, much of that hype has died down to the point of non-existence  at this point. As of this weekend, Steve Jobs has earned just $14.5 million overall.

The only other wide release that premiered over the weekend was the raunchy horror comedy Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse, and the film performed as poorly as many pundits predicted, earning just $1.7 million for its opening weekend.

Next week’s biggest release will almost certainly be Spectre, the new James Bond movie that opened overseas over the weekend and is already a bona fide blockbuster outside the U.S. Daniel Craig’s return as Agent 007 managed to break the records set by the previous installment of the franchise, Skyfall, in most of the countries where it premiered over the weekend and it’s expected to do the same when it arrives in U.S. theaters November 6.

Also debuting in theaters this upcoming weekend is The Peanuts Movie, a new, animated feature based on Charles M. Schulz’s beloved comic strip.

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
5 great Netflix movies to watch on Christmas
A TSA agent runs in Carry-On.

To quote a notorious line from a James Bond movie, "Christmas comes but once a year." Since that's the case, you better have something fun planned, or the holidays can quickly turn sour. You could watch a football game or go to the movie theater, but why bother with all that hassle when Netflix is just sitting right there?

The streamer has plenty of movies available, especially Christmas-themed ones. But the following list doesn't include such recent films as Hot Frosty or The Merry Gentlemen. Instead, these five movies are all guaranteed crowd-pleasers, even if they don't explicitly involve the holiday.

Read more
5 great drama movies to watch on Christmas
A man puts his hand on the steering wheel in a car in a scene from The Noel Diary.

'Tis the season for watching movies. It's a great opportunity to watch a movie since many of us will be off during the holiday season. There are so many Christmas movies to choose from that it can be overwhelming. Family-friendly classics like Elf, Home Alone, and A Christmas Story never go out of style. Rom-coms like Love Actually and The Holiday always play well this time of year.

There are significantly fewer Christmas dramas than the two categories mentioned above. However, the dramas that are available to stream are worth watching. Our picks for drama movies to watch on Christmas include a famous psychological drama from a master, an iconic adaptation of a novel, and a Netflix romance.

Read more
1999 had the greatest lineup of Christmas movies ever
Two men work on a film projector in The Cider House Rules.

We all have our traditions for Christmas. Some sing carols around the neighborhood while others wear ugly sweaters to work and make gingerbread at home. For myself, every year I always go to one place of worship on Christmas Day: the movie theater. I'll be there this year, plunging myself into the Gothic darkness of Robert Eggers' Nosferatu remake, watching Nicole Kidman submit to unspeakable carnal pleasures in Babygirl, and witnessing the birth of Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown.

For as long as I can remember, I've gone to the theater on Christmas and watched three or four movies, usually from different genres, and it's always been the one present to myself that's satisfied me the most. But there was one year when my holiday movie marathon hit a perfect score, all 10s, and no notes: 1999. That was a great movie year, so it stands to reason its Christmas Day offerings would tower over the rest.

Read more