Mamma Mia!
As of August 13,
Universal Pictures International (UPI) has grossed more than $1 billion in
box-office revenue for the year-to-date, it was announced today by
Universal Pictures' Chairman Marc Shmuger and Co-Chairman David Linde.
Reaching the billion-dollar benchmark in August is the fastest the studio
has achieved this success and puts it on track to its most successful year.
Bolstered by a slate that represents a broad diversity of success and
propelled by three films that have passed the $100 million mark
internationally this year -- the musical romantic comedy "Mamma Mia!" ($180
million to date), the epic adventure "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon
Emperor" ($152 million to date) and the action-thriller "Wanted" ($123
million) -- the studio is well on its way to its most successful worldwide
box-office performance.
"Universal is a studio with a commitment to making global films for
global audiences, and the consistency of success in this year's slate
demonstrates how well that is working around the world," said David Kosse,
president of UPI. "I'm extremely gratified and proud that UPI is realizing
this historic success with films as different as 'Mamma Mia!' and 'The
Mummy.' It's proving that our specialty is our adaptability."
Since its release in early July, "Mamma Mia!" has turned into an
unprecedented worldwide phenomenon, breaking records across the world as
the biggest opening of a musical in history. It has already become the
highest grossing film of 2008 in the U.K., Austria, Greece, Hungary, Norway
and Sweden. Within the next two weeks, the Meryl Streep and Pierce
Brosnan-led musical romantic comedy will become the most successful film
Universal has ever released in the U.K. The film still has more than 30
territories in which to open.
Additionally, "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor" has opened to
record-breaking success in multiple territories around the world and is
firmly on track to become the highest grossing film internationally in "The
Mummy" franchise. The opening international first-weekend gross of "The
Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor" was more than 60 percent bigger than the
combined opening weekend totals for "The Mummy" and "The Mummy Returns," if
they had the same release pattern. The film has opened at No. 1 in 38
territories so far, and it has maintained its position as the most popular
film in the world for more than two weeks since its release on August 1. It
was Universal's biggest opening ever in Russia, Spain, Ukraine, Korea,
Latin America and Thailand, among others.
Other highlights that have contributed to UPI's success for 2008
include impressive performances from its original productions and
acquisitions such as "The Incredible Hulk," "American Gangster," "Charlie
Wilson's War," "Atonement," "Step Up 2: The Streets," "Forgetting Sarah
Marshall," "The Other Boleyn Girl" and "Hellboy II: The Golden Army."
The rest of the year shows little signs of deceleration for the studio
internationally. "Mamma Mia!" has another 32 territories in which to
release, while "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor" has 15 more
territories and Wanted an additional 20. Upcoming UPI films include the
action-thriller "Death Race," starring Jason Statham and Joan Allen; the
comedy "Role Models," starring Seann William Scott and Paul Rudd; the drama
"Changeling," from director/producer Clint Eastwood and starring Angelina
Jolie and John Malkovich; and the Coen brothers-directed/Brad Pitt and
George Clooney-led comedy-thriller "Burn After Reading."
Universal Pictures International
Universal Pictures markets and distributes films internationally
through Universal Pictures International (UPI), which officially began
doing business on January 1, 2007. In the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy,
Germany, Austria, German-speaking Switzerland, Benelux, Russia, Australia,
Mexico and France, UPI directly markets and distributes movies through our
local offices, creating campaigns and release strategies that respond to
the culture and market behavior of those territories. In other parts of the
world, Universal distributes through Paramount's local offices as it
transitions out of formerly shared UIP model. In some smaller territories
we continue to work through UIP on theatrical distribution.
SOURCE Universal Pictures International