Portugal Box Office for Furry Vengeance (2010)

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Furry Vengeance poster
Theatrical Performance (US$)
Portugal Box Office $63,813Details
Worldwide Box Office $39,340,177Details
Home Market Performance
North America DVD Sales $7,806,625 Details
North America Blu-ray Sales $473,478 Details
Total North America Video Sales $8,280,103
Further financial details...

  1. Summary
  2. News
  3. Box Office
  4. Worldwide
  5. Full Financials
  6. Cast & Crew
  7. Trailer

Synopsis

When Dan Sanders takes a job overseeing the construction of a supposedly “green” housing development in the Oregon woods, he thinks his greatest challenge will be helping his urban-oriented family adjust to country life while simultaneously trying to keep his demanding boss happy. But, when the local animals learn that Dan is in charge of their habitat’s destruction, the fur flies in an all-out battle between man and nature.

Metrics

Movie Details

Production Budget:$35,000,000
Portugal Releases: February 21st, 2013 (Wide)
Video Release: August 17th, 2010 by Summit Home Video
MPAA Rating: PG for some rude humor, mild language and brief smoking
(Rating bulletin 2103, 1/13/2010)
Running Time: 91 minutes
Keywords: Family Comedy, Dysfunctional Family, Animal Lead, Animals Gone Bad, Famously Bad, Talking Animals, Same Actor, Multiple Roles, Scene in End Credits
Source:Original Screenplay
Genre:Comedy
Production Method:Live Action
Creative Type:Kids Fiction
Production/Financing Companies: Participant Media
Production Countries: United States
Languages: English

DVD Sales: Last Soars to First

August 30th, 2010

New releases this week were dominated by The Last Song, which outsold the second place film on this week's sales chart by a two-to-one margin. It won the week with 761,000 units and $13.69 million in revenue. More...

DVD and Blu-ray Releases for August 17th, 2010

August 16th, 2010

The dog days of summer continue on the home market, but it is the calm before the storm. In this case the storm is a flood of TV on DVD releases, which we are starting to see show up in earnest. This is both good news and bad news. On the one hand, there are plenty of top notch releases coming out over the next few weeks. On the other hand, reviewing a full-season TV on DVD release takes a long time, which means my schedule will be packed for the next month or so. At least I get screeners for free, while consumers will see their wallet under assault week after week. The best selling release of the week is Dexter: Season Four, which is also the easy choice for Pick of the Week. I'm not sure if the DVD or the Blu-ray is the better deal, but regardless which format you choose, it is worth picking up. More...

International Details: Another Milestone for Alice

May 16th, 2010

For the fourth weekend in a row, Alice in Wonderland remained in second place, this time adding $13.28 million on 3843 screens in 54 markets for a total of $630.30 million internationally and $961.15 million worldwide. Since last week it has crossed the $600 million milestone on the international scene, making it just the 13th film to do so. It is now the seventh highest grossing film of all time. The film's per screen average has declined enough that it will likely shed screens and markets rather quickly. That said, if the worst thing you can say about a movie's box office run is, "It might not make it to $1 billion!" then the film is a massive success. More...

Iron Golden, but Not as Lustrous as Some Expected

May 10th, 2010

Iron Man 2 started off the summer in style with the biggest opening weekend of the year and the fifth biggest of all time. This helped the overall box office hit $174 million, which was 76% higher than last weekend. More importantly, it was 20% higher than the same weekend last year. This is extra important, because last year we were already a week into summer and we couldn't afford any weakness at the box office if 2010 was to maintain its lead over 2009. It was able to do so. In fact, it increased its lead slightly to 6.5% at $3.66 billion to $3.44 billion. More...

Nightmare Strong, Year-to-Year Comparison is Scary

May 3rd, 2010

The new releases were a little weaker than anticipated, while the holdovers could only compensate so much. The overall box office was $102 million, which was 2% higher than last weekend. That's the good news. The bad news is that it was down 36% from the same weekend last year. Of course, this weekend last year was the first weekend of May, so the comparison is fundamentally unfair and 2010 still has a 6.4% lead over 2009 at $3.46 billion to $3.25 billion. I expect it to increase its lead next weekend. More...

Weekend Estimates: Nightmare Reboot Earns Big Bucks

May 2nd, 2010

A Nightmare on Elm Street continued what is now practically a tradition of impressive performances for franchise reboots by opening with $32.2 million this weekend, according to Warner Bros.' Sunday estimate. That's the second-best opening performance for a movie in the franchise, behind only the franchise-crossover Freddy vs. Jason. It also helped shake up the market a little after a few sluggish weeks. More...

Will Nightmare Scare the Competition?

April 29th, 2010

It's the final weekend of April, which is normally a very bad time to release a big hit. But it appears that one of this year's two wide releases may make it. A Nightmare on Elm Street should be able to open faster than the two films did last week, but comparing it to last year is a bit more confusing. Last year, the last weekend in April of saw the release of Obsessed, which earned close to $30 million. A Nightmare on Elm Street should match that figure. However, the same weekend last year was actually the first weekend of May, which saw the release of Wolverine. There's a chance that overall box office combined won't match that film's opening. More...

2010 Preview: April

April 1st, 2010

Buy at AllPosters.com

March was a mixed month, with only three films surpassing expectations. On the other hand, Alice in Wonderland will beat expectations by more than $200 million, so it alone makes up for a lot of the disappointing films. On a more troubling note, the final big release, How to Train Your Dragon didn't get off to as fast a start as I would have liked, which could affect the box office going forward. Last year April got off to a fast start and that should happen this month as well. It better, as the quality of films quickly declines as the prospect of May blockbusters begins to loom large on the horizon. More...

Because some of our sources provide box office data in their local currency, while we use USD in the graph above and table below, exchange rate fluctuations can have effect on the data causing stronger increases or even decreases of the cumulative box office.

Weekend Box Office Performance

DateRankGross% ChangeScreensPer ScreenTotal GrossWeek
2013/02/22 10 $21,645   13 $1,665   $21,645 1
2013/03/01 13 $16,365 -24% 11 $1,488   $38,962 2
2013/03/08 12 $16,159 -1% 12 $1,347   $56,366 3
2013/03/15 15 $6,240 -61% 7 $891   $63,813 4

Box Office Summary Per Territory

Territory Release
Date
Opening
Weekend
Opening
Weekend
Screens
Maximum
Screens
Theatrical
Engagements
Total
Box Office
Report
Date
North America 4/30/2010 $6,627,564 2,997 3,002 11,288 $17,630,465 5/22/2013
Portugal 2/21/2013 $21,645 13 13 43 $63,813 12/14/2015
 
Rest of World $21,645,899
 
Worldwide Total$39,340,177 12/14/2015

Full financial estimates for this film, including domestic and international box office, video sales, video rentals, TV and ancillary revenue are available through our research services. For more information, please contact us at research@the-numbers.com.

Leading Cast

Brendan Fraser    Dan Sanders

Supporting Cast

Brooke Shields    Tammy Sanders
Matt Prokop    Tyler Sanders
Ken Jeong    Neal Lyman
Angela Kinsey    Felder
Toby Huss    Wilson
Skyler Samuels    Amber
Samantha Bee    Principal Baker
Ricky Garcia    Frank
Eugene Cordero    Chesse
Patrice O'Neal    Gus
Jim Norton    Hank
Billy Bush    Drill Sergeant
Alice Drummond    Mrs. Martin
Gerry Bednob    Mr. Gupta
Alexander Chance    Security Guard
Dee Bradley Baker    Animal Voice Effects

For a description of the different acting role types we use to categorize acting perfomances, see our Glossary.

Production and Technical Credits

Roger Kumble    Director
Michael Carnes    Screenwriter
Josh Gilbert    Screenwriter
Robert Simonds    Producer
Keith Goldberg    Producer
Ira Shuman    Executive Producer
Brendan Fraser    Executive Producer
Jeff Skoll    Executive Producer
Jonathan King    Executive Producer
Dan Hegeman    Sound Effects Editor

The bold credits above the line are the "above-the-line" credits, the other the "below-the-line" credits.