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Monday, 6 January 2014

Golden Stans 2013

76 films seen (a new record, beating the previous high of 73), of which 61 can compete for the Golden Stans (four films seen twice, one theatrical performance on film, two concert movies [Metallica and Muse], and nine re-releases [of which eight were in the BFI’s Gothic season]).

As ever the first award at each Golden Stans ceremony is the Cone of Shame. It is with considerable regret that I must allocate it to Jonathan Glazer’s Under The Skin. The premise of the story and its planned execution was intriguing – Scarlett Johansson’s alien cruises around Glasgow’s backstreets, picking up men for her own nefarious needs, shot almost as a documentary – but the viewing experience was unexpectedly tedious and deliberately off-kilter and challenging. Hell, even a naked Scarlett can’t lift this lifeless nonsense out of the scrap pile – and that is really saying something given my love for Scarlett!

Now on to the good stuff, and first it’s Best Score, fought out by three films:
  • Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood for The Master
  • Steven Price for Gravity
  • Hans Zimmer for Man of Steel
Zimmer conjured something fresh for the Superman reboot that owed nothing to John Williams’ brilliant 70s heroic theme, rather Zimmer’s main themes seemed to hint at the loneliness as much as the heroism at the myth’s core.
Price’s work on Gravity, owed something to the school of Zimmer, but added to the inevitability of disaster and doom that envelopes the script’s protagonists.
Greenwood delivered an appropriately challenging score for The Master – and he gets the gong.

The shortlist for Best Cinematography is as follows:
  • Mihai Malaimare Jnr for The Master
  • Larry Smith for Only God Forgives
  • Eric Steelberg for Labor Day
  • Barry Ackroyd for Parkland
  • Sean Bobbitt for 12 Years A Slave
  • Barry Ackroyd (again) for Captain Phillips
  • Emmanuel Lubezki for Gravity
Malaimare Jnr’s compositions were beautiful; Smith manipulated darkness as if it was a member of the cast; Steelberg suffused Labor Day with the late summer, Americana light that really helps the film; Bobbitt expanded his scope with impressive ease in 12 Years; and Lubezki played an integral part in a technical marvel.
But none of them are the winner: the award goes to Barry Ackroyd for his expectedly outstanding work on Parkland and Captain Phillips.

In a year awash with sequels, prequels and adaptations, there are a number of runners for Best Adapted Screenplay:
  • David S Goyer for Man of Steel 
  • Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope for Philomena 
  • Peter Landesman for Parkland
  • Bill Ray for Captain Phillips

Goyer brought all the best revisionist versions of the Superman myth together, Coogan and Pope delivered an almost perfectly balanced argument between unquestioning faith and intelligent interrogation, Landesman shone fresh, intimate light on a well-known moment in history, and Bill Ray found space for more than just Captain Phillips’ story.
In the end, the award goes to Coogan and Pope for Philomena, whose sense of balance extended to conjuring a perfect mixture of comedy and tragedy.

The Best Original Screenplay award has the following shortlist:
  • Joseph Gordon-Levitt for Don Jon
  • Lake Bell for In A World…
  • JC Chandor for All Is Lost
  • Emily Mortimer and Dolly Wells for Doll & Em
  • Tobias Lindholm for A Hijacking
  • Jeff Nichols for Mud
Don Jon was a more effective commentary on the role sex, sexual imagery and porn play in our society than Shame, but suffered from trying to cover too many bases.
Lake Bell in her own film plus Doll & Em brought pleasingly real female voices and lives to the fore.
Nichols effortlessly conjured an early 70s film, brimming with strange and complex characters but probably overcooked the post-script.
Chandor and Lindholm charted the waters of survival at sea, and it is the latter that secures the award for his thorough vision and detailed execution of a freighter hijack from four viewpoints.

Now, on to the acting awards, kicking off with Best Supporting Actress. The shortlist is:
  • Amy Adams/The Master, and Man Of Steel
  • Anne Hathaway/Les Miserables
  • Helen Hunt/The Sessions
  • Nicole Kidman/The Paperboy
  • June Squibb/Nebraska
  • Sally Hawkins/Blue Jasmine
Amy Adams was brilliantly cast as the Lady Macbeth with the mousewife appearance in The Master, and she then went on to nail Lois Lane, imbuing her with intelligence and impatience.
Ignore the weight loss nonsense: Anne Hathaway suffered and sung beautifully in Les Mis – an unforgettable performance.
In a year with so many good roles for 40-something (and older) women, Helen Hunt had one of the best as the sex therapist who gets too close to her disabled client.
Nicole Kidman gave the loopiest performance of her career in The Paperboy: her simulated fellatio scene simply takes the breath away.
June Squibb clearly enjoyed spitting out the best lines in Nebraska.
And Sally Hawkins was a surprise in Blue Jasmine – and displayed such an affinity for her character that I assume Woody Allen will be using her regularly from now on.
A winner? While Hathaway was unforgettable, and she pretty much stole the film from Hugh Jackman, the role is just a little too showy, so Amy Adams gets the nod for continuing to surprise.

The shortlist for Best Supporting Actor is:
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman/The Master
  • Abdihakin Asgar/A Hijacking
  • Will Forte/Nebraska
  • Paul Giamatti/The Congress, and Parkland
  • James Badge Dale/Parkland
  • Barkhad Abdi/Captain Phillips
PSH was brilliant in The Master: cunning, intelligent, desperate and shallow all at once.
Will Forte did well with the most difficult role in Nebraska as the put-upon, loser son.
James Badge Dale stunned in Parkland as Lee Harvey Oswald’s brother, struggling to lead the family in the wake of the black sheep committing one of the crimes of the century.
Also standing out in Parkland was Paul Giamatti as Zapruder, while his doctor provided one of the few emotional connections for the audience in The Congress.
And then what does one make of 2013’s two Somali pirates in A Hijacking and Captain Phillips: brilliant performances in the moment or pieced together on the cutting room floor? We’ll probably never know, but surely no actors in 2013 had to portray characters under so much pressure (other than their respective prisoners!)?
But because he got my man of the match trophy among the huge and hugely impressive ensemble cast of Parkland, Giamatti snatches the trophy. His Zapruder has one of the great American tragedies etched across his features, his shock, his tears are the shock suffered by and the tears shed by the West.

The average age of the women on the shortlist for Best Actress is 38.6: who says there aren’t any great roles for older women? The youngest on my shortlist is 23, the oldest is 49, and seven of them are over 35. The shortlist is:
  • Naomi Watts/The Impossible, and Adore
  • Amy Acker/Much Ado About Nothing
  • Robin Wright/Adore, and The Congress
  • Sandra Bullock/Gravity
  • Lake Bell/In A World…
  • Kate Winslet/Labor Day
  • Felicity Jones/The Invisible Woman
  • Cate Blanchett/Blue Jasmine
  • Jennifer Lawrence/Hunger Games 2
  • Amy Adams/American Hustle
This is a tough category, with many of the shortlisted playing not very likeable characters.
For example, Cate Blanchett’s study of a woman falling apart is brilliant but unsympathetic, especially once we learn the story’s key plot twist and Blanchett’s role in that twist.
Robin Wright and Naomi Watts as the mothers who really should know better in Adore are equally brilliant, but it’s hard to feel any sympathy for them.
Wright has a more sympathetic role in the mess that is The Congress, while Watts excels as expected in The Impossible.
Amy Adams (again) in American Hustle is on top form, allowing us finally to work out when she’s conning and when she’s not.
Jennifer Lawrence is brilliant against type in the same film, but that’s a supporting role and doesn’t count here. What does is the conviction and believability she brought once again to Katniss Everdeen – without Lawrence, the Hunger Games movies have very little game.
Almost as convincing was Sandra Bullock in Gravity: the film pretty much rests on her as she is our only connection to the disaster for the majority of the film.
Felicity Jones was compelling and exquisite as Dickens’ new muse and lover in The Invisible Woman.
Amy Acker clearly had a rigorous understanding of the script in Much Ado (one of those rare occasions when an American actor ‘gets’ Shakespeare) and nailed her role as Beatrice.
Also delivering on the comedy front was Lake Bell, who fronted, wrote and directed In AWorld…, providing a unique girl geek voice.
And la Winslet was her usual excellent self in Labor Day, languorously adding to the film’s lazy, sunny afternoon intimacy and eroticism.    
In the end, I’m going for Naomi Watts, who finally picks up a Golden Stan, for making the impossible and the unbelievable seem real.

The shortlist for Best Actor is:
  • Tom Holland/The Impossible
  • Hugh Jackman/Les Miserables
  • John Hawkes/The Sessions
  • Matthew McConnaughey/Mud, Paperboy
  • Daniel Bruhl/Rush
  • Bruce Dern/Nebraska
  • Robert Redford/All Is Lost
  • Josh Brolin/Labor Day
  • Chiwetel Ejiofor/12 Years A Slave
  • Tom Hanks/Captain Phillips
Another tough category with a diverse mixture of performances to relish. Teenage Tom Holland was a knock-out in The Impossible – his character, by dint of his screentime, was crucial to the movie and at no point did he fail to convince.
Hugh Jackman gave his all in Les Mis – his performance is such that you can’t imagine anyone else pulling it off.
John Hawkes was the opposite of Jackman’s physical presence in The Sessions, only being able to use his facial expressions. His character’s intelligence and charm seemed to be easily conveyed – and Hawkes now has a new type of character in his armoury otherwise chock full of psychos and weirdos.
Matthew McConnaughey is cranking up the number of ‘character actor’ roles he plays, and in both Mud and Paperboy his effortless Southern cool played perfectly against the dangerous and lost aspects of his characters.
Daniel Bruhl probably delivered the best impression of 2013: his Niki Lauda was note perfect, his pronounciation of “bullshit!” is worthy of an award itself. But this went way beyond impersonation: to all intents and purposes that was Niki Lauda alongside Thor.
Who knows whether Bruce Dern was slaying any personal demons in Nebraska, but he certainly made the most of the role, fooling his on-screen family and the audience into not knowing what was dementia and what was an old man on a mission.
That other oldtimer, Robert Redford, was so ridiculously convincing in All Is Lost that at times it almost felt like a documentary. His one on-screen exclamation shatters the soul.
Josh Brolin was arguably cast against type, given the understated performance required for Labor Day to succeed in the way that it does. The threat of violence is what we know him for, but he revealed a softer side we’ve not seen before, which should have women of a certain age swooning in the aisles.
Chiwetel Ejiofor suffers supremely in 12 Years A Slave, and holds his own easily against a starry cast, but I feel the impact of his performance is lost among the brutality and sledgehammer sermonising of the film.
And then we have the comeback kid, Tom Hanks, delivering one of the great performances of his life (and he’s already got a few of those) as Captain Phillips.
Picking a winner is really, really difficult here, but a winner there must be… and it’s Robert Redford, as much for his near-wordless physicality as the moment he finally breaks down and realises that all is indeed lost.

And we’re on to the penultimate award, Best Director, and the shortlist is not especially short:
  • Paul Thomas Anderson/The Master
  • Jeff Nichols/Mud
  • Tobias Lindholm/A Hijacking
  • Nicholas Winding Refn/Only God Forgives
  • Alfonso Cuaron/Gravity
  • JC Chandor/All Is Lost
  • Jason Reitman/Labor Day
  • Peter Landesman/Parkland
  • Paul Greengrass/Captain Phillips
  • David O Russell/American Hustle
Russell produced the best film of the Christmas holiday and seems to be turning into Martin Scorsese when he was good and skipped lightly on his feet.
Greengrass is the thinking man’s action film director, his Captain Phillips the best action thriller of the year.
Nichols and Reitman conjured beautiful Americana, while Landesman’s debut unlocked the human story within the assassination of JFK. Reitman worked commendably well outside his established milieu, while PT Anderson reinforced his position as the most intelligent director in America today.
Chandor displayed remarkable versatility, switching from the dialogue-heavy approach of his debut (Margin Call – which suffered from not enough focus on the editing of the story) to a commanding grasp of the sea in All Is Lost.
Also skirting with disaster and high thrills were Cuaron and Lindholm. The former delivered the 3D knock-out blow of the year, while the latter delivered possibly the most gripping film of the year: at no point does he lose focus of the suffering of the three key players.
But unquestionably the Best Director award must go to Winding Refn. His work is hard to like, but it’s hard to forget and Only God Forgives is impressive in all technical areas. While I question the quality of the story and the space given to the actors to perform, I am unable to think of a film that was so well executed from paper to screen.

Finally, it’s the big one: Best Film. Here’s the list of films that left a (good) lasting impression on me in 2013.
  • The Master: a film that has grown in stature since I first saw it in January ’13; like There Must Be Blood, it encourages questions and debate.
  • Le Miserables: I’m not a musical fan, but it was hard to ignore the film’s power, and the conviction of Jackman, Crowe and Hathaway.
  • The Sessions: great performances and a charming, moving tale.
  • Mud: the king of indie Americana delivered again. Shame about the epilogue though.
  • Man Of Steel: an almost brilliant reworking of Superman’s origin; the much-debated finale sets up the Big Blue Boy Scout’s no killing belief and effectively reinforces his position as an orphan.
  • A Hijacking: just about as tense as movies get, and what with it not being Hollywood, you are not guaranteed a happy ending; probably better than Captain Phillips.
  • Only God Forgives: the use of colour, the precision of the editing, the score, the compositions are simply remarkable.
  • Doll & Em: OK, it’s a TV show, but it was premiered at the London Film Festival, so I’m counting it as a film. Funny, touching and realistic.
  • Nebraska: not Alexander Payne’s best, but still high quality entertainment, infused with the ebbing of life that the film reflects on.
  • Gravity: a technical marvel, with high tension; pity about the pat characterisation.
  • All Is Lost: yet more tension, and a lean and mean script that nevertheless allows space for Robert Redford to excel.
  • In A World…: Lake Bell wrote, directed and starred in this loving piss-take of the Hollywood voice-over industry – a wonderful surprise.
  • Labor Day: there hasn’t been anything like this since Clint Eastwood’s A Perfect World; a prime slice of dreamy Americana; not sure the coming of age framing device was necessary though.
  • All Cheerleaders Die: a vicious, energetic, wild romp. Lesbian vampire cheerleading Heathers: what’s not to like?!
  • Philomena: top quality performances (although Judy Dench is well-within type), a brilliant script, and unfussy direction from Stephen Frears. I was raging at the screen and crying every few minutes, often at the same time.
  • Don Jon: Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s comedic meditation on the effects of porn was insightful, toe-curlingly funny, and sexy, but also over-wrought and suffered from a pat ending. Ultimately it’s an unexpected paen for the allure of the older woman.
  • Parkland: an astonishing debut that shines new light on an old topic. Surely there's nothing new to be said about JFK's assassination after this?
  • Captain Phillips: gripping, tense, and a sharp focus on real people caught in the crossfire of international politics and First World v Third World economic imbalances. Almost as stunning on the IMAX as Gravity.
  • The Invisible Woman: Ralph Fiennes' follow-up to Coriolanus is a distinctly different flavour to his muscular Shakespeare actioner - a moody, intense period drama with a believable and sympathetic romance between Dickens and his lover.
  • American Hustle: remember when Scorsese had fun rather than setting out to tell us THIS FILM IS IMPORTANT? This film is like that: it has a spring in its step, a cast to die for, one hell of a soundtrack and a director on top form. Highly, highly recommended.
After much consideration the battle is between The Master, A Hijacking, All Is Lost, Philomena, Parkland and Captain Phillips. They all have a claim to the title: The Master is the most challenging; All Is Lost the most physical and immersive experience; Parkland a superb and humane debut; Philomena successfully combines righteous indignation and quiet forgiveness; and Captain Phillips is a master class in superior action thriller movie-making. But trumping that last for tension, combined with a more effective and more political scope, A Hijacking takes the Golden Stan for Best Film.  


That's it for 2013; bring on 2014!

2013 box office review

More so than years previously, 2013 was the year of the sequel: 14 of the top 20 films were either sequels or adaptations of characters and scenarios that already exist as films or in other media. It was also the year that China became the second-largest film market in the world after the US.

More than half of the biggest successes were sequels or prequels; indeed, the top five were Iron Man 3, Despicable Me 2, Hunger Games 2, Fast & Furious 6, and Monsters University.

At $1.2bn, Tony Stark ruled the roost, riding the coat-tails of 2012’s Avengers and the brilliant trailer that ran before the billion dollar Skyfall. The Avengers effect on the Golden Avenger was massive: IM3 took 94% more than IM2; yes, it was helped by IMAX and 3D premium pricing (which IM2 didn’t have), but that isn’t enough to explain such a significant surge.

Stark 3 pulled in nearly one third more at the US box office than its predecessor, and nearly 158% more internationally. As well as increasing its UK take from £20.9m to £36.9m, the outstanding figure for IM3 was the $121.2m from China – IM2 raised just $7m three years previously… Indeed, IM3’s Chinese haul was greater than The Avengers’, and its international total finished just $90m short of The Avengers as well.

For more on China, scroll down.

The country also helped Marvel stablemate Thor with his sequel, just 2.5 years after the first. Thor 2’s worldwide take was 40% greater than the original – suggesting some waning of the post-Avengers effect that drove IM3. In the US, Thor 2 was ‘just’ 11% up on the original as the year ended, but its international take was up 59%.

Perhaps Thor 2’s ‘otherness’, ie it didn’t look like a sequel to the Avengers, held it back somewhat. April 2014’s Captain America 2 should perform slightly better than Thor 2, but wont get near IM3. 

Number two on the worldwide list and on the international list, third at home and top in the UK was Despicable Me 2 – or should that be the Minion movie prologue? With nearly double the original’s take internationally, the sequel finished off with nearly 70% more dollars worldwide at more than $900m. The Minions’ own movie has already been greenlit…

Continuing this theme of sequels outpacing their progenitors, the second Hunger Games movie came out of the gates hard and fast, and by year-end it was not far off the $408m domestic haul of the original. Its strong legs over Christmas means that will pass the original’s domestic total by the middle of January 2014.

Inevitably, the international take jumped ahead of the original: by year-end, it was at circa $420m, up 48%.

It’s worth noting that Lawrence’s awards season success helped drive 2012’s Silver Linings Playbook to $190m worldwide in 2013. And she then ended the year where it had started, in another David O Russell film, American Hustle, generating strong box office and critical plaudits. Can she be stopped? Up next for her is X-Men: Days of Future Past in early summer 2014.

Fast & Furious 6 picked up where Fast Five left off with another surprise international hit. Worldwide, the sixth instalment was 26% more successful than the fifth, falling just shy of $800m, driven by an international take up by a third. The seventh instalment arrives in 2015.

Placing fifth worldwide was Monsters University with north of $700m. A disappointment for Pixar? May be: the would-be monsters took a caning at home from those pesky Minions (and as the year ended, Frozen was catching fast and by the end of the first weekend of 2014 had smashed passed the monsters); and didn’t perform as well as might be expected in the UK, given how well-loved Monsters Inc is; but did nearly treble the original’s international take. Rather than a sequel and given the huge gap since the original (12 years), Monsters University’s performance should probably be viewed like that of a new property.

Does MU’s less-than-gigantic success mean the marketeers in charge of the Finding Nemo sequel have their work cut out?  

Moving on to arguably the toughest marketing job of 2013, The Man of Steel, its $662m total, less than half of which came from the US, was neither fish nor fowl, neither flop nor mega-hit. The film had its issues, like Nolan’s Bat trilogy it’s not for kids, and its performance expectations were out of kilter thanks to the event box office of Bat 2 and 3: the big blue boy scout is not a billion dollar property yet. It remains to be seen whether an established Superman and a new Batman up against each other in 2015 will be a case of two plus two equalling five… or equalling 1.5.

The best performance by a fresh property was Gravity: the one movie of the year that genuinely had to be seen in 3D generated more than $600m. The bravery inherent in the movie’s concept and execution was rewarded with both critical praise and audiences’ awe. Someone at Warner Bros enjoyed a substantial Christmas bonus off the back of this one.

Gravity also marked a great year for Sandra Bullock, following her US summer hit The Heat, which fell just shy of $160m (not bad for a movie fronted by two women). Her box office success must give some hope to other over-40 actresses.

In addition, it was a great year for her Heat co-star Melissa McCarthy, who fronted spring hit Identity Thief ($134m in the US), and also featured in The Hangover Part III ($112m in the US).

Other original material that did well in 2013 was: The Croods with nearly $600m; trad Disney smash hit Frozen, edging passed $550m with circa another $200m to be added in 2014; and leggy, summer sleeper hit Now You See Me with $350m.

And what of the short people? The first part of the Hobbit, edged its over the $1bn post in 2013, taking in another $300m-plus on top of the $685.7m garnered in 2012 (see holdovers below). However, it wasn’t especially well received, which meant that Hobbit 2 arrived with a reduced tailwind, resulting in lower opening weekends in the US and the UK, which then dragged over into following weekends: so where Hobbit 1 closed out 2012 on $685.7m worldwide, Hobbit 2 finished 2013 on $651.5m. I don’t see Hobbit 2 matching its predecessor’s final total of $1,017m, although a final figure north of $900m is certainly possible.

Sequels that weren’t hits
Not all sequels were hits in 2013: step forward, surprise flop of the year Hangover Part III. The concluding part of the trilogy was always going to struggle to match the performance of the second part, but nobody predicted a 40.2% collapse in the franchise’s worldwide BO. It was down 28% internationally, but suffered an ignominious 59% collapse at home.

When people expect to see a comedy that’s what they expect to see: will Hangover Part III have a wider impact on moviemakers? Surely it must reinforce Hollywood’s chronic fear of taking risks?

Ironically, Star Trek Into Darkness also took very few risks – and suffered as a result. May be it was a year too late, but Paramount will feel shortchanged with growth over the original of ‘just’ 21%. Like Hangover, Star Trek fell short at home by 11%.

While the Enterprise nearly doubled its international take, it was starting from a low base, so its result of $238m is small beans. Lots of work to be done then for the third instalment. 

The second Wolverine movie dropped 26% at home, but its international haul was up 46%, thanks mostly to $40.5m from China (the first Wolverine movie four years ago didn’t get a release there), giving it an 11% worldwide boost over the original.

Given X-Men: First Class’s $354m take in 2011, Fox knows it has no divine right to expect Avengers-style box office for Days of Future Past in May 2014, and will need to market the time-travelling mutants hard.

The Smurfs 2 pulled in more than $350m worldwide, but that’s 38% less than the original.
And as for The Lone Ranger (directed by Gore Verbinski and starring Johnny Depp – so I’m counting it as an off-shoot of the multi-billion dollar Pirates franchise), the less said, the better. A miserable $260.5m worldwide from a $215m budget: the ball was definitely dropped there!

Notable holdovers
Many films released towards the end of 2012 performed well in 2013 too. Django Unchained leads this table, bringing in $355.4m worldwide in 2013 alone.

The Hobbit ended 2012 on $685.7m and added another $331.3m in ’13.

Arthouse 3D hit Life Of Pi crossed over assuredly to mainstream audiences and added another $310.2m to the $298.8m it pulled in at the end of 2012.                       

Les Miserables also took in more than $300m in ’13 (including £40.6m and four weeks at number one in the UK), taking it to a total of more than $440m.

Holdovers play a significant role in the UK box office top 20: Life Of Pi added £18.2m to the £10.7m it had acquired in 2012; and the first instalment of the Hobbit raked in another £16.1m on top of 2012’s £35.9m.              

Wreck-It Ralph took a game £20m-plus in 2013, having been released in the US in the autumn of 2012.

The Chinese effect
Iron Man 3 wasn’t the only US film to perform well in China: more than a quarter of Pacific Rim’s entire worldwide booty was reaped from the Chinese - $111.9m to be precise! That’s more than it took in the US.

Other notable performances were Gravity, floating to north of $70m, Fast & Furious burning its way to $66.5m, and Skyfall getting close to $60m.

The real shocks though were Man Of Steel, raking in a super $63.4m, and Star Trek Into Darkness reaching nearly $57m. If two such traditionally US films can perform so well in China, no distributor has an excuse for failure in this market.

China remains keener on 3D re-releases than anywhere else: while there was nothing to rival the eye-popping $250m-plus take of the 3D Titanic in 2012, Jurassic Park 3D hauled in $55m.

The post-Avengers effect helped Thor almost as much as Iron Man: the Thunder God sequel shot to more than $55m – the original was never screened in China!
   
Worldwide
Iron Man 3  $1,211m                     
Despicable Me 2  $918.5m                     
Hunger Games 2  $815.5m
Fast & Furious 6  $788.7m                     
Monsters University  $743.6m
Man Of Steel  $662.8m
Gravity  $662.7m
The Hobbit 2  $651.5m
Thor: The Dark World  $627m                        
The Croods  $585.2m
Frozen  $551.7m
World War Z  $540m
Oz The Great And Powerful  $493.3m
Star Trek Into Darkness  $467.4m                     
The Wolverine  $414.8m
Pacific Rim  $407.6m
GI Joe Retaliation  $375.7m
Django Unchained  $355.4m
Now You See Me  $351.7m
The Hangover Part III  $351m                        

UK 
Despicable Me 2  £47.4m
Les Miserables  £40.7m
Iron Man 3  £36.9m
The Hobbit 2  £32.9m
Hunger Games 2  £31.5m
Monsters University  £30.6m
Man Of Steel  £29.9m
Frozen  £27.9m
Gravity  £27.3m
The Croods  £26.7m
Star Trek Into Darkness  £25.8m
Fast & Furious 6  £25.1m
Wreck-It Ralph  £23.6m
Thor: The Dark World  £19.7m
The Hangover 3  £19.3m
Life Of Pi  £18.2m
The Hobbit  £16.1m
Captain Phillips  £15.9m
The Great Gatsby  £15.7m
Oz The Great And Powerful  £15m
Django Unchained  £15m
  
US
Iron Man 3  $409m                        
Hunger Games 2  $395.5m
Despicable Me 2  $367.8m                     
Man Of Steel  $291m
Monsters University  $268.5m
Frozen  $263m
Gravity  $254.7m
Fast & Furious 6  $238.7m                     
Oz The Great and Powerful  $234.9m         
Star Trek Into Darkness  $228.8m                     
Thor: The Dark World  $202.7m
World War Z  $202.4m
The Hobbit 2  $201.5m
The Croods  $187.2m
The Heat  $159.6m
We’re The Millers  $150.4m
The Great Gatsby  $144.8m
The Conjuring  $137.4m
Identity Thief  $134.5m
Grown Ups 2  $133.7m
  
International
Iron Man 3  $804.6m                     
Despicable Me 2  $551m                        
Fast & Furious 6  $550m                        
Monsters University  $475m
The Hobbit 2  $450m
Thor: The Dark World  $426.3m                     
Gravity  $408m
The Croods  $400m
Hunger Games 2  $393.6m
Man Of Steel  $377m
World War Z  $337.6m
Pacific Rim  $310m
The Wolverine  $282.3m
The Smurfs 2  $276.5m
Life Of Pi  $270.8m
Frozen  $267.3m
Django Unchained  $261.2m
Oz The Great And Powerful  $258.4m
GI Joe Retaliation  $253.2m

The Hobbit  $253m
Sources: Box Office Mojo / BFI