
HOT FUZZ, HARRY AND BEAN BOOST BRITISH FILM
INDUSTRY
November 12, 2007
Source: UK Film Council
Harry Potter
and the Order of the Phoenix, Mr Beans Holiday, Hot
Fuzz, Miss Potter and Atonement have pushed the market share
for British films at the UK box office to 27% in 2007, up
from 19% for the whole of 2006, according to the latest figures
published today by the UK Film Council.
Film fans have flocked to British cinemas
in 2007 with admissions hitting almost 117 million by the
end of August, an increase of 12% on the same period in 2006.
The UK Film Councils research and
statistics bulletin which provides the latest film data and
market intelligence for 2007 also reveals that the amount
of money spent on making films in the UK in the first half
of 2007 was £420 million. Inward investment was particularly
strong at £324 million compared to £253 million
for the first half of 2006 thanks to films such as Sweeney
Todd and The Dark Knight.
Cinema-going
The range and quality of films on offer,
from US blockbusters to British and specialised films made
it a bumper six months at the box office. In addition, the
traditional jinxes on cinema-going - sunny weather plus major
sporting and television events were absent, giving
cinemas a golden opportunity to further boost their admissions.
July hit a new record as the single biggest
month for cinema-going since January 1970, with 21.8 million
tickets sold. The last weekend in July was the highest grossing
weekend in cinema history as the release of The Simpsons movie
and Transformers boosted box office takings to more than £28
million in just three days.
British films also performed successfully:
the market share for British films from January to September
2007 was 27% - a 40% increase on the 19% market share achieved
for the whole of 2006.
The top film of the year so far is Harry
Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, which has grossed £49.2
million to 23 September. Two home-grown comedies were huge
successes at the beginning of the year Mr Beans
Holiday grossed over £22 million, while Hot Fuzz grossed
£21 million. UK director Paul Greengrasss The
Bourne Ultimatum also grossed £22 million.
Threequels also dominated the
summer season. As well as The Bourne Ultimatum, releases included
Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End, Shrek the Third,
Spider-Man 3, Oceans Thirteen and Rush Hour 3.
Other strong performances came from home
grown films Miss Potter* (£6.9 million), Atonement (£6.7
million and still on release), Run, Fat Boy, Run (£6.3
million and still on release), Notes on a Scandal* (£5.9
million) and The Last King of Scotland* (£5.7 million).
Foreign language films also made their mark
in UK cinemas. Films in 29 languages including English were
released in the first eight months of 2007. The top five performing
foreign languages were Hindi, French, Mayan and German.
Since 2002, foreign language films have
become more popular with cinema-goers with several foreign
language films breaking through the £1 million barrier
at the box office. Top performing foreign language titles
in 2007 include Apocalypto (£4.1million), The Lives
of Others* (£2.6 million), La Vie En Rose* (£1.5
million), Tell No One* (£1.2 million), and Curse of
the Golden Flower* (£1.2 million).
Film production
The amount of money spent on making films
in the UK in the first half of 2007 was £420 million
comparable with 2006. Inward investment is up and stands
at £324 million (compared to £253 million for
the first half of 2006), the best six months since 2004. Home-grown
UK productions include How to Lose Friends and Alienate People*,
Brideshead Revisited*, St Trinians*, The Edge of Love
, and Revolutionary Road.
Inward investment films made in the UK this
year include The Dark Knight, Sweeney Todd, The Tale of Desperaux,
Mamma Mia! and The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian.
UK co-productions fell from 42 in the first
half of 2006 to nine in the first six months of 2007. However,
they have significantly picked up in the third quarter of
2007 with a further 20 co-productions made in the UK bringing
the total number so far this year to 29.
John Woodward, Chief Executive Officer of
the UK Film Council said, Its been a strong half
year of consolidation for film production in the UK. Currently
domestic films are steady and weve had strong inward
investment from the US again this year. When you couple that
with the incredibly strong box office for British films you
can see that the underlying trends are very healthy.
*Titles above supported with either production
or distribution Lottery funding from the UK Film Council
Top 20 UK films released in the UK and
Republic of Ireland
1 January- 21 September 2007
Rank Title Country of Gross box Distributor
origin office (£)
1 Harry Potter and the Order
of the Phoenix** UK/USA 49.23 Warner Bros
2 The Bourne Ultimatum** UK/USA 22.42 Universal
3 Mr Beans Holiday UK 22.11 Universal
4 Hot Fuzz UK 21.00 Universal
5 Miss Potter UK/USA 6.91 Momentum
6 Atonement** UK 6.73 Universal
7 Run, Fat Boy, Run** UK/USA 6.35 Entertainment
8 Notes on a Scandal UK 5.87 20th Century Fox
9 The Last King of Scotland UK/Ger 5.67 20th Century Fox
10 28 Weeks Later UK 5.31 20th Century Fox
11 Becoming Jane UK/USA 3.78 Walt Disney
12 Sunshine UK 3.18 20th Century Fox
13 Hannibal Rising UK/Fra/Ita/USA 2.68 Momentum
14 Amazing Grace UK/USA 2.28 Momentum
15 Outlaw UK 1.61 Pathé
16 This is England UK 1.54 Optimum
17 La Vie en Rose** UK/Fra/Cze 1.49 Icon
18 Venus UK 1.16 Walt Disney
19 Goal! 2 UK/Spa/Ger 1.15 Walt Disney
20 I Want Candy UK 0.96 Walt Disney
Source: Nielsen EDI, RSU analysis
Gross box office = cumulative total up to 23 September 2007
Films with a double asterisk (**) were still being exhibited
on 23 September 2007
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