The weekend's other big release, the prehistoric buddy comedy Year One, landed in fourth place with $20.2 million -- an okay debut for the $60 million movie. However, all indicators point to a quick descent for the Jack Black/Michael Cera flick. Year One dropped 24 percent from Friday to Saturday (never a reassuring sign), and the movie received an unimpressive "B-" rating from CinemaScore. Year One is all but certain to join Land of the Lost as another box-office disappointment for high-concept comedies.
On the other hand, The Hangover (No. 2 with $26.9 million) and Up (No. 3 with $21.3 million) continued to show off their box-office stamina, dropping only 18 percent and 31 percent, respectively, from the prior weekend. Up now stands at $224 million, and may levitate past Star Trek (currently at $239 million) to become the year's highest-grossing film.
Finishing off the top five was The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3, which fell an alarming 52 percent for an $11.3 million weekend stash. Also opening this weekend was Woody Allen's Whatever Works, starring Larry David. The New York-based comedy laughed up $281,000 from just nine theaters for a weekend-leading $31,000 gross per theater. The film will expand to more than 300 theaters on July 3.
Overall, the box office was up 3 percent compared to last year's Father's Day weekend, when Get Smart debuted to a surprisingly sharp $38.7 million. Hope you all are having a splendid Father's Day!
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