New York:
With Batman lurking, the prehistoric critters of Ice Age: Continental Drift ran off with the box office, earning $46 million in their opening weekend, according to studio estimates on Sunday.
The animated film from 20th Century Fox is the fourth in the Ice Age series and the first in 3-D. The North America performance of Continental Drift was on par with previous Ice Age movies but well below the opening weekend of the second installment, "The Meltdown," which opened with $68 million in 2006.
There has now been a decade of Ice Age films, allowing the characters voiced by Ray Romano, Queen Latifah and John Leguizamo to become increasingly familiar to audiences, particularly international ones. The film had already done robust overseas business ahead of opening in the U.S. This weekend it earned $95 million internationally, bringing its overseas total to $339 million.
"Scrat rules the world," said Chris Aronson, head of distribution for Fox, referring to the films' rat-squirrel mascot, whose wordless, futile pursuit of a nut is a mainstay of the movies.
The Ice Age franchise has now surpassed $2.2 billion worldwide, and the studio expects "Continental Drift" to equal the global total of the last installment, 2009's "Dawn of the Dinosaurs," which took in $886.7 million.
"There's really not very many animated franchises that have had three sequels," said Aronson. "The performance of Ice Age has been remarkably consistent."
The weekend was inevitably shadowed by two superheroes, coming a week after the debut of Sony's Spider-Man reboot, The Amazing Spider-Man, and one week before the highly-anticipated Batman sequel, The Dark Knight Rises.
In its second week of release, Spider-Man earned $35 million, pushing it past $200 million domestically. It earned nearly $67 million overseas over the weekend, bringing its worldwide gross to $521.4 million.
Seth MacFarlane's R-rated comedy hit, Ted, which stars Mark Wahlberg and a talking teddy bear, added $22.1 million in its third week for a total of $159 million for Universal Pictures.
But the weekend belonged to family films, which had three of the top 10 films at the box office.
Ice Age is the third animated blockbuster to debut at No. 1 this summer, and the previous mega-cartoons -- Pixar Animation's Brave and DreamWorks Animation's Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted -- also padded their totals. In fourth place, Brave added $10.7 million to its $195.6 million domestic total, and the 10th place Madagascar 3 added $3.5 million to its $203.7 million domestic total.
"This shows how incredibly important the family audience is, particularly in the summer when families are looking for entertainment that's appropriate for the kids and the parents as well," said Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian. "You've got three family films that all performed incredibly well and each weekend topped the box office."
The weekend business was, as expected, below the corresponding weekend last year, when the final Harry Potter film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, set what was then a box office record of $169.2 million.
The Avengers earlier this year opened bigger than Deathly Hallows, but that record could well be tested by Christopher Nolan's third Batman film come next weekend.
"This is the calm before the storm that is The Dark Knight," said Dergarabedian.
The animated film from 20th Century Fox is the fourth in the Ice Age series and the first in 3-D. The North America performance of Continental Drift was on par with previous Ice Age movies but well below the opening weekend of the second installment, "The Meltdown," which opened with $68 million in 2006.
There has now been a decade of Ice Age films, allowing the characters voiced by Ray Romano, Queen Latifah and John Leguizamo to become increasingly familiar to audiences, particularly international ones. The film had already done robust overseas business ahead of opening in the U.S. This weekend it earned $95 million internationally, bringing its overseas total to $339 million.
"Scrat rules the world," said Chris Aronson, head of distribution for Fox, referring to the films' rat-squirrel mascot, whose wordless, futile pursuit of a nut is a mainstay of the movies.
The Ice Age franchise has now surpassed $2.2 billion worldwide, and the studio expects "Continental Drift" to equal the global total of the last installment, 2009's "Dawn of the Dinosaurs," which took in $886.7 million.
"There's really not very many animated franchises that have had three sequels," said Aronson. "The performance of Ice Age has been remarkably consistent."
The weekend was inevitably shadowed by two superheroes, coming a week after the debut of Sony's Spider-Man reboot, The Amazing Spider-Man, and one week before the highly-anticipated Batman sequel, The Dark Knight Rises.
In its second week of release, Spider-Man earned $35 million, pushing it past $200 million domestically. It earned nearly $67 million overseas over the weekend, bringing its worldwide gross to $521.4 million.
Seth MacFarlane's R-rated comedy hit, Ted, which stars Mark Wahlberg and a talking teddy bear, added $22.1 million in its third week for a total of $159 million for Universal Pictures.
But the weekend belonged to family films, which had three of the top 10 films at the box office.
Ice Age is the third animated blockbuster to debut at No. 1 this summer, and the previous mega-cartoons -- Pixar Animation's Brave and DreamWorks Animation's Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted -- also padded their totals. In fourth place, Brave added $10.7 million to its $195.6 million domestic total, and the 10th place Madagascar 3 added $3.5 million to its $203.7 million domestic total.
"This shows how incredibly important the family audience is, particularly in the summer when families are looking for entertainment that's appropriate for the kids and the parents as well," said Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian. "You've got three family films that all performed incredibly well and each weekend topped the box office."
The weekend business was, as expected, below the corresponding weekend last year, when the final Harry Potter film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, set what was then a box office record of $169.2 million.
The Avengers earlier this year opened bigger than Deathly Hallows, but that record could well be tested by Christopher Nolan's third Batman film come next weekend.
"This is the calm before the storm that is The Dark Knight," said Dergarabedian.