Vin Diesel can't do sci-fi but he can do cars!
Weekend Report: ‘Fast and Furious’ Power Slides to Record Debut
Weekend Report: ‘Fast and Furious’ Power Slides to Record Debut
Weekend Report: ‘Fast and Furious’ Power Slides to Record Debut
by Brandon Gray
Vin Diesel in Fast and Furious -- April 5, 2009
Revving way past its predecessors' redlines, Fast and Furious packed an estimated $72.5 million under its hood, summarily dusting Anger Management's $42.2 million to notch the biggest April debut ever. Driven by the action sequel, the weekend as a whole was the busiest on record for April, grossing an estimated $185 million and surging 65 percent ahead of the same weekend last year.
Packing more than 5,200 screens at 3,461 theaters under its hood, Fast and Furious outdrew the final tally of the franchise's previous movie, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, in three days flat, and it was much quicker off the line than the first two pictures. In 2001, The Fast and the Furious, scored $40.1 million out of the gate and hit $144.5 million by the end of its run. The sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious, which featured the original's Paul Walker but was no longer Vin Diesel-fueled, accelerated to a $50.5 million opening and closed with $127.2 million. Sans Walker and Diesel, Tokyo Drift started at $24 million.
Not only did Fast and Furious have the highest-grossing opening for a car-themed movie (beating Cars' $60.1 million), it was also tops for a straight-forward action picture (as opposed to the superhero or fantastical kind), surpassing The Bourne Ultimatum's $69.3 million. What's more, during the January-to-April timeframe, only The Passion of the Christ had a larger-grossing debut in the past.
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