Summer 2014: The Top 10 Hits and More

In what has become a tradition on the blog, it is time to revisit the cinematic season that transpired ten years ago. In 2014, that meant the warmer months were ruled by a ragtag group of relatively unknown Marvel superheroes (at least compared to your Spideys, Batmen, and Supermen, etc…).

Audiences might have been hooked on the feelings these MCU characters gave them, but they were also transfixed by apes, giant lizards, and pizza chomping turtles.

Let’s take a trip down a decade old memory lane with the top 10 domestic earners of summer ’14 as well as other noteworthy pics and significant flops.

10. How to Train Your Dragon 2

Domestic Gross: $177 million

While the DreamWorks Animation sequel couldn’t match or exceed the gross of its 2010 predecessor at $217 million, the fantasy tale won the Golden Globe for its genre and was Oscar nominated for Animated Feature. A sequel would follow five years later.

9. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Domestic Gross: $191 million

With Michael Bay producing and Megan Fox starring, the transformation of this franchise from the 1990s to the 21st century was a financial if not critical success. A sequel which made less cash came two summers later.

8. 22 Jump Street

Domestic Gross: $191 million

Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill’s second go-round as hapless cops (this time graduating to going undercover at college instead of high school) outpaced the 2012 original financially. A third Street never arrived (there was a rumored crossover with the Men in Black series), but Tatum has recently spoken of his desire to get the ball rolling.

7. Godzilla

Domestic Gross: $200 million

It might be the 30th overall feature in the Godzilla franchise, but this monster mash from Gareth Edwards achieved some of the series’ best reviews and kicked off the MonsterVerse that is still wreaking havoc at multiplexes. It also assisted in washing away dirty memories of Roland Emmerich’s 1998 summertime treatment with Matthew Broderick

6. The Amazing Spider-Man 2

Domestic Gross: $202 million

While it made over $200 million domestic, Andrew Garfield’s return to the Spidey suit was seen as underwhelming with critics and audiences. Planned sequels didn’t materialize though Garfield and head villain Jamie Foxx would reprise their roles in 2021’s Spider-Man: No Way Home.

5. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes

Domestic Gross: $208 million

The follow-up to 2011’s Rise of the Planet of the Apes, Matt Reeves took over directorial duties. The result was critical acclaim as Dawn became the long running franchise’s largest grosser. Two sequels (including Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes in May) have followed.

4. X-Men: Days of Future Past

Domestic Gross: $233 million

This sequel combined cast members from the 2000-06 trilogy including Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine, Ian McKellen’s Magneto, Patrick Stewart’s Professor X, and Halle Berry’s Storm with some of their younger counterparts from 2011’s X-Men: First Class like Michael Fassbender’s Magneto and James McAvoy’s Professor X (as well as Jennifer Lawrence’s Mystique). The result is the highest earning pic with X-Men in the title. With the exception of the Deadpool success that followed two years later, direct sequels Apocalypse and Dark Phoenix failed to replicate the success here.

3. Maleficent

Domestic Gross: $241 million

After the massively profitable live-action remake of their animated Alice in Wonderland four years earlier, Disney continued the trend with Maleficent. Angelina Jolie starred as the Sleeping Beauty villainess and a 2019 sequel earned less than half of the total of this domestically.

2. Transformers: Age of Extinction

Domestic Gross: $245 million

Shia LaBeouf exited Michael Bay’s robotic mayhem and Mark Wahlberg entered this fourth entry. A billion in receipts worldwide resulted in making this 2014’s best worldwide grosser. Sequels are still coming and the latest Transformers: Rise of the Beasts hit a lower $157 million last year.

1. Guardians of the Galaxy

Domestic Gross: $233 million

This was the 10th feature in the MCU and it seemed like the first that could be a financial question mark. The heroes weren’t as familiar to audiences, but James Gunn’s tale of eccentric comic characters took by the box office by storm. Two sequels have followed in addition to Guardians appearances in other MCU sagas.

And now let’s cover some other flicks from ’14 that had crowds and critics chatting.

Neighbors

Domestic Gross: $150 million

The comedic teaming of Seth Rogen and Zac Efron caused this fraternal experience to be the season’s most fruitful original comedy. A less regarded sequel came two years later.

Lucy

Domestic Gross: $126 million

Two summers after The Avengers set records, Scarlett Johansson had a solid sci-fi action grosser with Luc Besson’s concoction.

The Fault in Our Stars

Domestic Gross: $124 million

John Green’s phenomenon of a YA romance bestseller became a blockbuster with decent reviews highlighting the chemistry of leads Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort.

Edge of Tomorrow

Domestic Gross: $100 million

Doug Liman’s sci-fi actioner with elements of Groundhog Day was not a sizable hit upon release. However, the Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt led title’s reputation has grown since with occasional rumors of another Tomorrow.

Let’s Be Cops

Domestic Gross: $82 million

This buddy cop pic was an out of nowhere late season surprise with over $100 million globally against a meager $17 million budget. Unlike nearly all other movies I’ve spoken of above, a sequel (somehow) did not happen.

Chef

Domestic Gross: $31 million

After helming two ginormous Iron Man chapters and a disappointment with Cowboys and Aliens, Jon Favreau cooked up critical cred and impressive midsize numbers with this road dramedy.

Boyhood

Domestic Gross: $25 million

Shot over a span of a decade, Richard Linklater’s unique coming-of-age drama remains the best reviewed picture of the 21st century according to Metacritic. Six Oscar nods, including a Supporting Actress victory for Patricia Arquette, were among its many plaudits.

Snowpiercer

Domestic Gross: $4 million

Bong Joon-Ho, who would make the BP winning Parasite five years later, garnered acclaim for this post-apocalyptic pic that would eventually spawn a TV series.

OK, so not all 2014 summer sagas were prosperous and here’s some that were considered commercial and/or critical disappointments.

Hercules

Domestic Gross: $72 million

Brett Ratner’s version of the Greek god wreaking havoc on his enemies cast Dwayne Johnson in the lead. The grosses were actually fairly decent, but I’m sure the studio were hoping for nine figures stateside… and does anyone even mention this movie anymore?

Jersey Boys

Domestic Gross: $47 million

The original play earned Tonys but audiences mostly tuned out Clint Eastwood’s take on the decades spanning musical drama.

Blended

Domestic Gross: $46 million

The Wedding Singer and 50 First Dates were each lucrative rom coms with Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore. The third time was not the charm with moviegoers or reviewers.

A Million Ways to Die in the West

Domestic Gross: $43 million

Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane ruled the comedic box office in summer 2012 with Ted. This follow-up starring him and Charlize Theron didn’t hit the bullseye.

The Expendables 3

Predicted Gross: $39 million

The previous two action headliners with Stallone, Schwarzenegger, Statham, and Snipes and others did well. For inexplicable reasons, a PG-13 rating was slapped on this third one and audiences turned their nose up for what they wanted to be R-rated violence. A fourth (and also unsuccessful) pic came out last year.

Sex Tape

Predicted Gross: $38 million

Jason Segel and Cameron Diaz couldn’t cause people to cue up this raunchy comedy which played to mostly empty establishments.

Sin City: A Dame to Kill For

Domestic Gross: $13 million

The first Sin City in 2005 made nearly $30 million in its first weekend while this sequel grossed less than half that figure total. The comic book adaptation co-directed by Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller might stand as the biggest flop of the season.

And that’s your recap, folks! Hope you enjoyed this walk down memory lane and I’ll have a post about summer 2015 up in the summer of 2025!

97th Academy Awards Predictions: July 13th Edition

We are beyond the midway point of 2024 so it’s time for me to forecast all feature-length film categories at the 97th Academy Awards! The result? Unsurprisingly, Dune: Part Two leads all nominees with 10 with Blitz and Emilia Pérez close behind at 9 and #1 BP selection Sing Sing at 7.

A caveat as obviously we are quite early to project certain races (Song comes to mind as does International Feature Film and Documentary Feature). Please note that all new competitions contain 10 possibilities while the acting and directing prizes list 15 (with 25 for BP). Those will likely get dwindled down around September.

We are still dealing with the matter of category placement. I’m going with the general consensus and now putting Carrie Coon’s work in His Three Daughters in lead Actress while her costar Natasha Lyonne is in supporting. Ms. Lyonne makes the cut in that race (replacing Coon).

I toyed with putting Saoirse Ronan back in Supporting Actress for Blitz since it’s been confirmed that her heralded role in The Outrun is officially out in October. Ultimately I decided to keep her in lead and I’m giving her the nom in Blitz over Outrun (slightly).

While BP remains the same, I’ve elevated Sean Baker’s direction in Anora over Mohammad Rasoulof for The Seed of the Sacred Fig. We also have Denzel Washington (Gladiator II) in Supporting Actor for the first time and that displaces Harris Dickinson (Blitz) from the quintet. With its trailer out, Gladiator II rises three sports in the BP hopefuls.

You can read all the movement and peep the new races below! I’ll have another update available before the end of July…

Best Picture

Predicted Nominees:

1. Sing Sing (Previous Ranking: 1) (Even)

2. Blitz (PR: 2) (E)

3. Dune: Part Two (PR: 3) (E)

4. Conclave (PR: 4) (E)

5. Anora (PR: 5) (E)

6. Emilia Pérez (PR: 6) (E)

7. Queer (PR: 7) (E)

8. The Piano Lesson (PR: 8) (E)

9. Nickel Boys (PR: 9) (E)

10. The Seed of the Sacred Fig (PR: 10) (E)

Other Possibilities:

11. Nightbitch (PR: 11) (E)

12. Gladiator II (PR: 15) (+3)

13. Joker: Folie à Deux (PR: 12) (-1)

14. The Apprentice (PR: 14) (E)

15. The End (PR: 13) (-2)

16. Maria (PR: 19) (+3)

17. The Room Next Door (PR: 17) (E)

18. All We Imagine as Light (PR: 20) (+2)

19. A Real Pain (PR: 16) (-3)

20. Nosferatu (PR: 18) (-2)

21. Hard Truths (PR: Not Ranked)

22. The Fire Inside (PR: 21) (-1)

23. His Three Daughters (PR: 22) (-1)

24. Here (PR: 25) (+1)

25. Dídi (PR: 23) (-2)

Dropped Out:

We Live in Time

Best Director

Predicted Nominees:

1. Steve McQueen, Blitz (PR: 2) (+1)

2. Denis Villeneuve, Dune: Part Two (PR: 1) (-1)

3. Edward Berger, Conclave (PR: 3) (E)

4. Jacques Audiard, Emilia Pérez (PR: 4) (E)

5. Sean Baker, Anora (PR: 7) (+2)

Other Possibilities:

6. Greg Kwedar, Sing Sing (PR: 6) (E)

7. Mohammad Rasoulof, The Seed of the Sacred Fig (PR: 5) (-2)

8. Luca Guadagnino, Queer (PR: 8) (E)

9. Marielle Heller, Nightbitch (PR: 10) (+1)

10. Ridley Scott, Gladiator II (PR: 12) (+2)

11. Malcolm Washington, The Piano Lesson (PR: 11) (E)

12. RaMell Ross, Nickel Boys (PR: 9) (-3)

13. Payal Kapadaia, All We Imagine as Light (PR: 13) (E)

14. Todd Phillips, Joker: Folie à Deux (PR: 15) (+1)

15. Joshua Oppenheimer, The End (PR: 14) (-1)

Best Actress

Predicted Nominees:

1. Amy Adams, Nightbitch (PR: 1) (E)

2. Angelina Jolie, Maria (PR: 2) (E)

3. Mikey Madison, Anora (PR: 3) (E)

4. Karla Sofia Gascón, Emilia Pérez (PR: 4) (E)

5. Saoirse Ronan, Blitz (PR: 5) (E)

Other Possibilities:

6. Saoirse Ronan, The Outrun (PR: 10) (+4)

7. Lady Gaga, Joker: Folie à Deux (PR: 6) (-1)

8. Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Hard Truths (PR: 9) (+1)

9. Tilda Swinton, The Room Next Door (PR: 7) (-2)

10. Carrie Coon, His Three Daughters (PR: Not Ranked) – moved from supporting

11. June Squibb, Thelma (PR: Not Ranked)

12. Ryan Destiny, The Fire Inside (PR: 11) (-1)

13. Zendaya, Challengers (PR: 14) (+1)

14. Florence Pugh, We Live in Time (PR: Not Ranked)

15. Jessica Lange, Long Day’s Journey Into Night (PR: 12) (-3)

Dropped Out:

Natasha Lyonne, His Three Daughters – moved to supporting

Lily Gladstone, Fancy Dance

Noémie Merlant, Emmanuelle

Best Actor

Predicted Nominees:

1. Colman Domingo, Sing Sing (PR: 1) (E)

2. Ralph Fiennes, Conclave (PR: 2) (E)

3. Daniel Craig, Queer (PR: 3) (E)

4. André Holland, The Actor (PR: 4) (E)

5. Sebastian Stan, The Apprentice (PR: 5) (E)

Other Possibilities:

6. Joaquin Phoenix, Joker: Folie à Deux (PR: 6) (E)

7. John David Washington, The Piano Lesson (PR: 7) (E)

8. Paul Bettany, The Collaboration (PR: 9) (+1)

9. Sebastian Stan, A Different Man (PR: 8) (-1)

10. Glen Powell, Hit Man (PR: 10) (E)

11. Paul Mescal, Gladiator II (PR: 13) (+2)

12. Jesse Plemons, Kinds of Kindness (PR: 11) (-1)

13. Ethan Herisse, Nickel Boys (PR: 12) (-1)

14. Andrew Garfield, We Live in Time (PR: 15) (+1)

15. Nicholas Hoult, Juror No. 2 (PR: Not Ranked)

Dropped Out:

Tom Hanks, Here

Best Supporting Actress

Predicted Nominees:

1. Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Nickel Boys (PR: 1) (E)

2. Zoe Saldaña, Emilia Pérez (PR: 2) (E)

3. Danielle Deadwyler, The Piano Lesson (PR: 3) (E)

4. Natasha Lyonne, His Three Daughters (PR: Not Ranked) – moved from lead

5. Isabella Rossellini, Conclave (PR: 4) (-1)

Other Possibilities:

6. Joan Chen, Dídi (PR: 8) (+2)

7. Julianne Moore, The Room Next Door (PR: 7) (E)

8. Kathy Burke, Blitz (PR: 6) (-2)

9. Elizabeth Olsen, His Three Daughters (PR: 13) (+4)

10. Selena Gomez, Emilia Pérez (PR: 11) (+1)

11. Erin Kellyman, Blitz (PR: 10) (-1)

12. Lesley Manville, Queer (PR: 12) (E)

13. Toni Collette, Juror No. 2 (PR: 9) (-4)

14. Valeria Golino, Maria (PR: 14) (E)

15. Emily Watson, Small Things like These (PR: 15) (E)

Dropped Out:

Carrie Coon, His Three Daughters – moved to lead

Best Supporting Actor

Predicted Nominees:

1. Samuel L. Jackson, The Piano Lesson (PR: 2) (+1)

2. Clarence Maclin, Sing Sing (PR: 1) (-1)

3. Kieran Culkin, A Real Pain (PR: 3) (E)

4. Stanley Tucci, Conclave (PR: 4) (E)

5. Denzel Washington, Gladiator II (PR: 8) (+3)

Other Possibilities:

6. Jeremy Strong, The Apprentice (PR: 6) (E)

7. Harris Dickinson, Blitz (PR: 5) (-2)

8. Drew Starkey, Queer (PR: 7) (-1)

9. Adam Pearson, A Different Man (PR: 9) (E)

10. John Lithgow, Conclave (PR: 11) (+1)

11. Brian Tyree Henry, The Fire Inside (PR: 10) (-1)

12. Elliot Heffernan, Blitz (PR: 14) (+2)

13. Mark Eidelstein, Anora (PR: 15) (+2)

14. Stephen Graham, Blitz (PR: 12) (-2)

15. Scoot McNairy, Nightbitch (PR: 13) (-2)

Best Original Screenplay

Predicted Nominees:

1. Anora (PR: 1) (E)

2. Blitz (PR: 2) (E)

3. A Real Pain (PR: 3) (E)

4. The Seed of the Sacred Fig (PR: 4) (E)

5. Hard Truths (PR: 6) (+1)

Other Possibilities:

6. The Room Next Door (PR: 7) (+1)

7. His Three Daughters (PR: 5) (-2)

8. The End (PR: 8) (E)

9. Dídi (PR: 10) (+1)

10. Kinds of Kindness (PR: 11) (+1)

11. The Apprentice (PR: 9) (-1)

12. Challengers (PR: 15) (+3)

13. All We Imagine as Light (PR: 13) (E)

14. I Saw the TV Glow (PR: Not Ranked)

15. Juror No. 2 (PR: 12) (-3)

Dropped Out:

Maria

Best Adapted Screenplay

Predicted Nominees:

1. Sing Sing (PR: 1) (E)

2. Conclave (PR: 2) (E)

3. Nickel Boys (PR: 4) (+1)

4. The Piano Lesson (PR: 3) (-1)

5. Queer (PR: 6) (+1)

Other Possibilities:

6. Emilia Pérez (PR: 7) (+1)

7. Dune: Part Two (PR: 8) (+1)

8. Nightbitch (PR: 5) (-3)

9. Hit Man (PR: 9) (E)

10. Inside Out 2 (PR: 11) (+1)

11. Joker: Folie à Deux (PR: 10) (-1)

12. Gladiator II (PR: 12) (E)

13. The Fire Inside (PR: 14) (+1)

14. The Collaboration (PR: 13) (-1)

15. Here (PR: 15) (E)

Best International Feature Film

Predicted Nominees:

1. Emilia Pérez

2. I’m Still Here

3. The Count of Monte Cristo

4. Uprising

5. Grand Tour

Other Possibilities:

6. Simon of the Mountain

7. Evil Does Not Exist

8. Emmanuelle

9. Kneecap

10. The Girl with the Needle

Best Animated Feature Film

Predicted Nominees:

1. Inside Out 2

2. The Wild Robot

3. Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl

4. Flow

5. Memoir of a Snail

Other Possibilities:

6. Moana 2

7. Savages

8. The Most Precious of Cargoes

9. The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim

10. Orion and the Dark

Best Documentary Feature

Predicted Nominees:

1. Black Box Diaries

2. Daughters

3. Sugarcane

4. No Other Land

5. Will & Harper

Other Possibilities:

6. Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story

7. Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat

8. Gaucho Gaucho

9. Union

10. Frida

Best Cinematography

Predicted Nominees:

1. Dune: Part Two

2. Blitz

3. Nosferatu

4. Anora

5. Gladiator II

Other Possibilities:

6. Emilia Pérez

7. Conclave

8. Joker: Folie à Deux

9. Queer

10. Maria

Best Costume Design

Predicted Nominees:

1. Wicked

2. Dune: Part Two

3. Gladiator II

4. Nosferatu

5. Blitz

Other Possibilities:

6. Furiosa: A Mad Max Story

7. Maria

8. Megalopolis

9. Conclave

10. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

Best Film Editing

Predicted Nominees:

1. Dune: Part Two

2. Blitz

3. Sing Sing

4. Anora

5. Emilia Pérez

Other Possibilities:

6. Conclave

7. Furiosa: A Mad Max Story

8. Gladiator II

9. Challengers

10. Joker: Folie à Deux

Best Makeup and Hairstyling

Predicted Nominees:

1. Dune: Part Two

2. Nosferatu

3. A Different Man

4. Furiosa: A Mad Max Story

5. Maria

Other Possibilities:

6. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

7. Joker: Folie à Deux

8. Sasquatch Sunset

9. Longlegs

10. Nightbitch

Best Original Score

Predicted Nominees:

1. Dune: Part Two

2. Joker: Folie à Deux

3. Sing Sing

4. Queer

5. Emilia Pérez

Other Possibilities:

6. Blitz

7. Gladiator II

8. Nickel Boys

9. Nosferatu

10. Challengers

Best Original Song

Predicted Nominees:

1. TBD from Emilia Pérez

2. TBD from Sing Sing

3. TBD from Mufasa: The Lion King

4. “Relentless” from Diane Warren: Relentless

5. TBD from Moana 2

Other Possibilities:

6. TBD from Joker: Folie à Deux

7. “Harper and Will Go West” from Will & Harper

8. “Compress/Repress” from Challengers

9. “Claw Machine” from I Saw the TV Glow

10. “Release” from Trap

Best Production Design

Predicted Nominees:

1. Dune: Part Two

2. Blitz

3. Gladiator II

4. Nosferatu

5. Wicked

Other Possibilities:

6. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

7. Joker: Folie à Deux

8. Conclave

9. Beetlejuce Beetlejuice

10. Queer

Best Sound

Predicted Nominees:

1. Dune: Part Two

2. Gladiator II

3. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

4. Blitz

5. Emilia Pérez

Other Possibilities:

6. Twisters

7. Wicked

8. A Quiet Place: Day One

9. Civil War

10. Nosferatu

Best Visual Effects

Predicted Nominees:

1. Dune: Part Two

2. Gladiator II

3. Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

4. Mufasa: The Lion King

5. Here

Other Possibilities:

6. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

7. Blitz

8. Twisters

9. Nosferatu

10. Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire

And, for the first time in 2024, my tally for overall nominations for various pictures are as follows:

10 Nominations

Dune: Part Two

9 Nominations

Blitz, Emilia Pérez

7 Nominations

Sing Sing

6 Nominations

Anora, Conclave, Gladiator II

4 Nominations

Nosferatu, The Piano Lesson, Queer

3 Nominations

Nickel Boys

2 Nominations

Furiosa: A Mad Max Story, Maria, Mufasa: The Lion King, A Real Pain, The Seed of the Sacred Fig, Wicked

1 Nomination

The Actor, The Apprentice, Black Box Diaries, The Count of Monte Cristo, Daughters, Diane Warren: Relentless, A Different Man, Flow, Grand Tour, Hard Truths, Here, His Three Daughters, I’m Still Here, Inside Out 2, Joker: Folie à Deux, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, Memoir of a Snail, Moana 2, Nightbitch, No Other Land, Sugarcane, Uprising, Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl, Will & Harper

Longlegs Review

Longlegs is a more effective freak show than FBI story. The direction of Osgood Perkins often shows a mastery at building tension and establishing a chilling tone. When the final act arrives, I grew colder to its energy as the plot points became more recognizable. That might be a little misleading, however, since this does feature a bonkers performance even by Nicolas Cage’s standards. When the procedural itself becomes more standard, it can suffer.

Maika Monroe is Agent Lee Harker, who can’t have been in the Bureau for long but whose seemingly psychic abilities serve as an asset. The manhunt is on for Longlegs, a serial killer dabbling in the occult and intricate doll making. His young female victims also share birthdays that fall on the 14th of the month.

Set in the 90s as evidenced by the Bill Clinton portrait behind her superior’s desk, Agent Harker seems to share more than a psychic connection to the case. Her off-kilter mother (Alicia Witt) seems hung up on religious themes. You begin to suspect that the case may have relations with that woman.

Barely seen or heard in the trailers, Mr. Cage is the title character. Buried in makeup that could earn those artists awards nominations, this is Nic at his most uncaged. There are snippets of his work that will surely enter the Memeification Hall of Fame and there are aspects of his performance that certainly remind us of his wild versatility. It’s also occasionally challenging to look beyond the off the charts Caginess of it.

The short of it is that Longlegs works best when the mystery is unraveling and its secrets are obscured like Cage was in the ads. As more is revealed, it loses some edge. Yet there is no doubt that Perkins (son of Psycho Anthony Perkins) injects this with devilish details that provide anxiety, especially early on.

*** (out of four)

Twisters Box Office Prediction

Blowing into theaters on July 19th some 28 years after its predecessor is Twisters. Lee Isaac Chung (maker of the Best Picture nominee Minari) goes into blockbuster mode with the disaster flick starring Daisy Edgar-Jones from Where the Crawdads Sing and Glen Powell of Top Gun: Maverick and Hit Man fame. Costars include Anthony Ramos, Brandon Perea, Maura Tierney, Harry Hadden-Paton, Sasha Lane, David Sorenswet (soon to be Superman), and Daryl McCormack.

In the summer of 1996, Jan de Bont’s Twister with Helen Hunt, Bill Paxton, and state of the art CGI stormed multiplexes with a $41 million debut and $237 million overall domestic haul. Reviews for part 2 are decent with an 81% RT score.

Recent tracking has this anywhere from a $40-55 million premiere. I suspect that is low. Decent buzz + 90s nostalgia and familiarity with the original could push this higher and I’m estimating it will. Adjusted for inflation, Twister would gross close to $80 million today out of the gate. I don’t believe the sequel gets there, but it could approach that figure.

Twisters opening weekend prediction: $72.3 million

Oscar Predictions: Touch

Iceland hasn’t had a warm reception from Oscar voters in their submissions for International Feature Film. They have put up a picture every year since 1980 and only 1991’s Children of Nature managed a nomination (falling short to Italy’s Mediterraneo). Touch from Baltasar Kormákur hits screens in limited fashion this weekend. Egill Ólafsson, Kōki, Pálmi Kormákur, Masahiro Motoki, and Yoko Narahashi star.

The filmmaker’s 2012 effort The Deep was Iceland’s contender for inclusion. It made the shortlist, but not the final cut of five. Kormákur has since helmed stateside releases including 2 Guns, Everest, Adrift, and Beast.

This decades spanning romantic drama has 93% on Rotten Tomatoes, but I’m not sure reviews are glowing enough. Iceland may well select it as their candidate. Their track records suggests it’s an uphill climb to say the least. My Oscar Prediction posts will continue…

Oscar Predictions: Twisters

Twisters storms into multiplexes on July 19th with Universal hoping it whips up giant business worldwide. Arriving nearly 30 years after his blockbuster predecessor from Jan de Bont, Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell star alongside Anthony Ramos, Brandon Perea, Maura Tierney, Harry Hadden-Paton, Sasha Lane, Daryl McCormack, Kiernan Shpika, and David Corenswet. Lee Isaac Chung, who last made the BP nominee Minari, directs.

Early reviews put this at 76% on RT with many write-ups calling it solid summer popcorn fare. Others say it doesn’t quite measure up to the 1996 pic. At the 69th Academy Awards, Twister received nominations for Best Sound and Visual Effects. It lost respectively to The English Patient and Independence Day.

At the 97th ceremony, Twisters could score nods in those same two competitions. Don’t expect it to win either as Dune: Part Two, for one, would stand a better shot. My Oscar Prediction posts will continue…

Oscar Predictions: Fly Me to the Moon

Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum look to provide Fly Me to the Moon with some financial liftoff this weekend. The rom com is set during the 1960s space race with Greg Berlanti directing. Costars include Jim Rash, Anna Garcia, Ray Romano, and Woody Harrelson. Its box office prospects are shaky (I have it debuting to around $12 million) and reviews aren’t gushing.

Fly has a fair if not over the moon 70% Rotten Tomatoes score. Several critics are praising the star power of the headliners, particularly Johansson. The actress received her first and second Academy noms in 2019 for Marriage Story (lead Actress) and Jojo Rabbit (Supporting Actress). This will not be #3 and I don’t see Moon factoring in anywhere else. However, Johansson could contend in Actress in a Musical/Comedy at the Golden Globes depending on competition strength. My Oscar Prediction posts will continue…

July 12-14 Box Office Predictions

Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum are hoping to land a third place showing behind the current animation domination with Fly to the Moon this Friday. We also have the critically acclaimed horror thriller Longlegs with Maika Monroe and Nicolas Cage and you can peruse my detailed prediction posts on the newbies here:

A low double digits premiere might get Moon to third after Despicable Me 4 and Inside Out 2. The former got off to a holiday weekend start in line with expectations while Inside continues its enormously financially potent run. I have Despicable dropping in the low 50s range with Out easing in the lower to mid 40s.

The worst case scenario for Moon would be fifth depending on how Longlegs debuts and A Quiet Place: Day One holds up in weekend 3. Longlegs is a wild card and it could exceed expectations. I have it just topping $10 million and that would put it in a close race with its genre competitor and perhaps even Moon. I’ll give the newcomer an edge over Quiet, but spots 3-5 will be a fascinating watch this time around.

Here’s how I envision the top 5 playing out:

1. Despicable Me 4

Predicted Gross: $36.4 million

2. Inside Out 2

Predicted Gross: $17.7 million

3. Fly Me to the Moon

Predicted Gross: $12.2 million

4. Longlegs

Predicted Gross: $11.6 million

5. A Quiet Place: Day One

Predicted Gross: $10.1 million

Box Office Results (July 5-7)

As mentioned, Illumination Entertainment performed as anticipated with Despicable Me 4. Having opened on Wednesday the 3rd, the four-quel (and sixth entry in the series when counting the Minions titles) made $75 million from Friday to Sunday and $122.6 million when counting its two extra days. That’s slightly below my respective estimates of $79.4 million and $126.3 million and certainly enough to keep this money minting franchise going.

Inside Out 2 dropped to second after three weeks atop the charts with $30.3 million, a tad under my $32.6 million take. The four-week gross is $534 million.

A Quiet Place: Day One tumbled a somewhat troubling 61% in third with $20.6 million. I was more generous at $24 million. The two-week tally is nearing nine digits with $93 million.

Ti West’s third pic in his horror trilogy MaXXXine was fourth with a so-so $6.7 million. That does top my $5.7 million forecast and it is higher than predecessors X and Pearl. This should fade quickly.

Bad Boys: Ride or Die rounded out the top five with $6.6 million (I said $6.8 million) for a five-week $177 million haul.

Kevin Costner’s Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1 was sixth in its sophomore outing with $5.3 million, in line with my $5.4 million prediction. The Western’s underwhelming total is $22 million.

And that does it for now, folks! Until next time…

Longlegs Box Office Prediction

Neon hopes Longlegs lights up the box office this Friday. The 90s set horror thriller comes from director Osgood Perkins with Maika Monroe and Nicolas Cage (as a demented serial killer) headlining. Costars include Blair Underwood, Alicia Witt, and Kiernan Shipka.

Plenty of scary genre titles have struggled in 2024 though A Quiet Place: Day One got off to a loud start just two weeks ago. Buzz is solid for Longlegs with a 93% RT rating.

Out on approximately 2500 screens, a victory for the studio would be a $10M+ start. It might get there and I’ll give it the benefit of the doubt. That low double digits gross might put it in a race with the third weekend of Quiet for fourth place.

Longlegs opening weekend prediction: $11.6 million

For my Fly Me to the Moon prediction, click here:

Oscar Predictions: The Count of Monte Cristo

France may have a tricky decision to make when it comes to selecting their Best International Feature Film contender. One such hopeful is The Count of Monte Cristo based on the mid-19th century adventure by Alexandre Dumas. It premiered at Cannes in May and is out in its native country already. Matthieu Delaporte and Alexandre de La Patellière co-direct with a cast including Pierre Niney, Bastien Bouillon, Anaïs Demoustier, Anamaria Vartolomei, and Laurent Lafitte.

Based on a small number of reviews, Count totals 100% on RT. They’re not all raves, but are encouraging enough that France should consider it for submission. Another Cannes premiere – the animated The Most Precious of Cargoes from the Oscar winning The Artist director Michel Hazanavicius – drew a more mixed reaction. Audrey Diwan’s thriller Emmanuelle is arriving this fall and it could also be a player in the awards game.

Eight pictures from France have made the cut in the 21st century with no victors (you have to go back to 1992’s Indochine for that). Cristo could get in, but I wouldn’t count on it becoming the first winner in over three decades. My Oscar Prediction posts will continue…