717_movies_of_2008_gran_torino.jpgIn 2008, only one movie got a perfect score in the Box Office Power Rankings: Iron Man, twice in May.

In the second weekend of January, we already have our first perfect score of 2009: for Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino.

At the outset, I will note that a perfect score says more about a movie's circumstances than it does the movie itself. The Dark Knight was, by a hair, a better move than Iron Man in critics' eyes, yet it opened with WALL·E in theaters, thus blocking its chance at a 40 in our weekly contest.

Gran Torino joins the rarefied company of Iron Man and The Bourne Ultimatum with its Box Office Power Rankings perfection. (Our rankings were launched in mid-2007.) But it's the lesser of the three. Eastwood's movie has a combined Rotten Tomaotes/Metacritic score of 148, compared to Bourne's 179 and Iron Man's 171.

From that, we can see that Gran Torino benefited from relatively weak competition in the box-office top 10.

About Box Office Power Rankings

Box Office Power Rankings balance box office and critical reception to create a better measure of a movie's overall performance against its peers than gross receipts alone.

The weekly rankings cover the 10 top-grossing movies in the United States for the previous weekend. I assign equal weight to box office and critical opinion, with each having two components. The measures are: box-office gross, per-theatre average, Rotten Tomatoes (RottenTomatoes.com) score, and Metacritic (Metacritic.com) score.

Why those four? Box-office gross basically measures the number of people who saw a movie in a given weekend. Per-theatre average corrects for blockbuster-wannabes that flood the market with prints, and gives limited-release movies a fighting chance. Rotten Tomatoes measures critical opinion in a binary way. And Metacritic gives a better sense of critics' enthusiasm (or bile) for a movie.

For each of the four measures, the movies are ranked and assigned points (10 for the best performer, one for the worst). Finally, those points are added up, with a maximum score of 40 and a minimum score of four.

For more Box Office Power Rankings, visit CultureSnob.com/bopr. Culture Snob is the Web site of Reader Managing Editor Jeff Ignatius.

Box Office Power Rankings: January 9-11, 2009
Box Office Ranks Critics' Ranks
Rank Movie Last Week Gross Per Theater Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic Total
1 Gran Torino - 10 ($29.5M) 10 ($10.5K) 10 (76) 10 (72) 40
2 The Curious Case of Benjamin Button 1 6 ($9.2M) 5 ($3.1K) 9 (73) 9 (69) 29
3 Marley and Me 1 7 ($11.4M) 6 ($3.3K) 8 (59) 7 (53) 28
4 Valkyrie 4 4 ($6.6M) 3 ($2.3K) 7 (58) 8 (56) 22
5 The Unborn - 8 ($19.8M) 9 ($8.4K) 2 (12) 2 (30) 21
5 Not Easily Broken - 2 ($5.3M) 8 ($7.3K) 6 (42) 5 (43) 21
7 Bride Wars - 9 ($21.1M) 7 ($6.5K) 2 (12) 1 (24) 19
8 Yes Man 6 3 ($6.0M) 2 ($2.0K) 6 (42) 6 (46) 17
9 Bedtime Stories 6 5 ($8.8M) 4 ($2.5K) 3 (23) 3 (33) 15
10 Seven Pounds 9 1 ($3.8M) 1 ($1.6K) 4 (27) 4 (36) 10

Support the River Cities' Reader

Get 12 Reader issues mailed monthly for $48/year.

Old School Subscription for Your Support

Get the printed Reader edition mailed to you (or anyone you want) first-class for 12 months for $48.
$24 goes to postage and handling, $24 goes to keeping the doors open!

Click this link to Old School Subscribe now.



Help Keep the Reader Alive and Free Since '93!

 

"We're the River Cities' Reader, and we've kept the Quad Cities' only independently owned newspaper alive and free since 1993.

So please help the Reader keep going with your one-time, monthly, or annual support. With your financial support the Reader can continue providing uncensored, non-scripted, and independent journalism alongside the Quad Cities' area's most comprehensive cultural coverage." - Todd McGreevy, Publisher