Box Office History for Bourne Movies

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  1. Summary
  2. Video
  3. News
  4. Acting Credits
  5. Technical Credits



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Release
Date
TitleProduction
Budget
Opening
Weekend
Domestic
Box Office
Worldwide
Box Office
Jul 29, 2016Jason Bourne $120,000,000$59,215,365$162,192,920$416,168,316
Aug 10, 2012The Bourne Legacy $125,000,000$38,142,825$113,203,870$280,355,920
Aug 3, 2007The Bourne Ultimatum $130,000,000$69,283,690$227,471,070$444,043,396
Jul 23, 2004The Bourne Supremacy $85,000,000$52,521,865$176,087,450$311,001,124
Jun 14, 2002The Bourne Identity $60,000,000$27,118,640$121,468,960$214,357,371
 
Averages $104,000,000$49,256,477$160,084,854$333,185,225
Totals 5 $520,000,000$800,424,270$1,665,926,127

Video Release Breakdown

Release DateTitleDomestic
Video Sales
to Date
Watch Now
Jan 21, 2003The Bourne Identity $16,470,127 Netflix Amazon iTunes
Dec 7, 2004The Bourne Supremacy $21,869,601 Netflix Hulu iTunes
Jul 24, 2007Bourne Files, The $6,549,114  
Dec 11, 2007Bourne Trilogy, The $27,308,948  
Dec 11, 2007The Bourne Ultimatum $127,279,090 Netflix iTunes
Dec 11, 2007Jason Bourne Collection, The $50,475,809  
Dec 11, 2012The Bourne Legacy $56,746,596 Netflix Hulu Amazon iTunes Google Vudu
May 10, 2016The Bourne Trilogy    
Jun 14, 2016The Bourne Classified Collection $12,402,255  
Nov 15, 2016Jason Bourne $33,973,657 Amazon iTunes Google Vudu
Dec 6, 2016The Bourne Ultimatum Collection $21,420,035  
Mar 24, 2020Treadstone: Season One   Amazon
 
 Totals$374,495,232

Our DVD and Blu-ray sales estimates are based on weekly retail surveys, which we use to build a weekly market share estimate for each title we are tracking. The market share is converted into a weekly sales estimate based on industry reports on the overall size of the market, including reports published in Media Play News.

For example, if our weekly retail survey estimates that a particular title sold 1% of all units that week, and the industry reports sales of 1,500,000 units in total, we will estimate 15,000 units were sold of that title. The consumer spending estimate is based on the average sales price for the title in the retailers we survey.

We refine our estimates from week to week as more data becomes available. In particular, we adjust weekly sales figures for the quarter once the total market estimates are published by the Digital Entertainment Group. Figures will therefore fluctuate each week, and totals for individual titles can go up or down as we update our estimates.

Because sales figures are estimated based on sampling, they will be more accurate for higher-selling titles.

Home Market Releases for June 6th, 2017

June 6th, 2017

Beauty and the Beast

Summer is usually the slowest time of the year on the home market; however, this week we have the biggest theatrical hit of the year so far coming out. Unfortunately, Beauty and the Beast isn’t really Pick of the Week material. It’s not bad and the DVD or Blu-ray Combo Pack hav enough extras to be worth picking up, but that’s not enough to put it over the top. Unfortunately, the film was such a massive hit at the box office that it scared away all of the competition and there’s no real Pick of the Week films on this week’s list. More...

Home Market Releases for December 6th, 2016

December 5th, 2016

Don’t Think Twice

There are a few releases on this week’s list that are worth picking up. The Secret Life of Pets is by far the biggest release of the week. That said, Don’t Think Twice is the best and the Blu-ray is our Pick of the Week. More...

International Box Office: Trek Makes Return Trip to International Chart with $37.0 million

September 7th, 2016

Star Trek Beyond

Star Trek Beyond climbed into first place for the first time in its run with $37.0 million in 40 markets for totals of $131.1 million internationally and $285.4 million worldwide. The film earned first place in China with a total opening of $30.92 million, including previews. It was not as strong in Brazil, where it earned $1.6 million on 479 screens. The film is doing well enough that it should break even, eventually, but it is not a truly monster hit. More...

International Box Office: Bourne Bounces Back with $56.2 million

August 31st, 2016

Jason Bourne

Jason Bourne returned to first place with $56.2 million on 10,247 screens in 62 markets for totals of $197.73 million internationally and $347.01 million worldwide. The film earned first place in China with $23.96 million over the weekend for a six-day opening of $49.13 million. The entire six day opening is included in the weekend number. Its total in China is already better than the lifetime totals for any other film in the franchise. The film wasn’t quite as potent in Mexico, but it still did well earning first place with $1.53 million over the weekend, which is the best opening in the franchise.

More...

Weekend Wrap-Up: Suicide Slumps to $43.54 million, Sausage Soars with $34.26 million

August 16th, 2016

Sausage Party

The overall box office was a little weaker than expected with Suicide Squad falling nearly as fast as Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice did. On the other hand, Sausage Party opened better than expected earning a solid second place. Overall, the box office pulled in $172 million over the weekend, which is 25% smaller than last weekend. Compared to the same weekend last year, the box office was 16% higher and that’s the most important number. Year-to-date, 2016 has pulled in $7.43 billion, putting it 5.3% ahead of last year’s pace. The box office just needs to maintain its $380 million lead throughout the rest of the summer to be considered a success. More...

Weekend Predictions: Party Time

August 11th, 2016

Sausage Party

Before we talk about the weekend predictions... If you can read this, it means my transfer worked well enough and I can do work from my parents house while pet-sitting. I will be at my parents place for three weeks looking after their dog and cat. I was at their house for less than 30 minutes before stepping into a puddle of dog drool. It is going to be a very long three weeks. ... As for the releases for the week, they are all amazing. The film earning the weakest reviews at the moment is Sausage Party, which is earning 82% positive reviews. 82% positive is the weakest of the three wide releases. That's amazing. On the other hand, it won't be the biggest release of the week. Pete’s Dragon has a better than 50/50 chance at reaching $100 million in total; however, as a family film, it will start relatively slow, but have good legs. Finally, there’s Florence Foster Jenkins, which is an early Oscar contender. It is not opening in a lot of theaters, so it is going to need great word-of-mouth to thrive. None of these new releases will match last year’s number one film, Straight Outta Compton, so it will be up to Suicide Squad to keep 2016 on the winning track. I think it will collapse by more than 60%, but 2016 has a lot better depth than 2015 and it will come out on top. More...

Weekend Estimates: Suicide Squad Crashes into August Record Books

August 7th, 2016

Suicide Squad

One of the most talked-about debuts of the year is shaping up to be one of the better ones. Suicide Squad will open with about $135 million, according to Warner Bros., easily the biggest weekend in August, beating Guardians of the Galaxy’s $94.3 million in 2014. It’s also the 3rd-best weekend in 2016, and should earn a little more than Deadpool’s $132 million debut. In spite of these awesome stats, there’s about as much negative press for the film as positive, and some of it not entirely fair. More...

Friday Estimates: Suicide Sets August Daily Record with $65.13 million

August 6th, 2016

Nine Lives

As expected, Suicide Squad broke the record for the biggest day in August with $65.13 million on Friday. Its opening day to preview multiplier was 3.17, which is not that much worse than the 3.28 earned by Guardians of the Galaxy in 2014. This is surprising, as Suicide Squad’s reviews have fallen to just 26% positive, while Guardians of the Galaxy earned 91% positive reviews. You would think word-of-mouth would tank Suicide Squad. Granted, it is just one day and perhaps it will fall as fast as Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice did throughout the rest of the weekend. Or perhaps moviegoers liked the movie significantly more than critics did. Its CinemaScore was a B+, which is not good, but not terrible. Or perhaps the lack of A-list comic book characters means it wasn’t able to get the average moviegoer as excited as they were for BvS, so it won’t be as front-loaded despite the worse reviews. Given this opening day, the film is on pace for $137 million, according to our model, which is on the very high end of expectations. That said, things might change tomorrow when we get the weekend estimates: the model’s range of uncertainty goes from $119 million at the low end to $154 million at the high end. More...

International Box Office: Jason is a Bourne Leader earning $50.74 million

August 4th, 2016

Jason Bourne

Jason Bourne opened in first place on the international chart with $50.74 million in 5,006 theaters in 48 markets. There were two markets that had a claim for biggest opening for the film: South Korea and the U.K. The film earned third place in South Korea with $8.02 million on 826 screens over the weekend for a total opening of $11.39 million. Meanwhile in the U.K., it earned second pace with $10.09 million in 561 theaters. The film earned first place in Australia with $5.85 million on 554 screens. Compared to the biggest hit in the franchise, The Bourne Ultimatum, these results were mixed. On the one hand, Ultimatum finished with less than $15 million in South Korea during its total run there, so an opening of over $11 million is amazing. On the other hand, Ultimatum opened with nearly $13 million in the U.K., which is close to 30% more than Jason Bourne’s opening. It will take a few more openings, plus a look at the film’s legs, to tell where it has finished. More...

Weekend Wrap-Up: Jason Bourne Treks to the top of the Chart with $59.22 million

August 2nd, 2016

Jason Bourne

There was no surprise at the top of the weekend box office chart, as Jason Bourne easily won with $59.22 million. This was on the high end of expectations, but not quite as strong as Star Trek Beyond’s opening last weekend. Both of the other two new releases, Bad Moms and Nerve, also did well. In fact, none of the films we talked about before the weekend missed expectations. The overall box office was down a little compared to last weekend, but a 3.1% decline is hardly noteworthy. More importantly, the box office was 30% higher than the same weekend last year. Year-to-date, 2016 saw its lead over 2015 nearly double to $260 million or 4.0%. Being ahead $6.84 billion to $6.58 billion at this point of the year is a good position to be in, but it wouldn’t take a major collapse for 2016 to fall behind 2015 by year’s end. More...

Weekend Estimates: Matt Damon Shows Star Power Can Matter

July 31st, 2016

Jason Bourne

When it comes to “star power” in Hollywood, I’ve been a skeptic ever since we launched our Bankability Index, and started looking at the real influence a single actor has on the performance of a film. With some notable exceptions (Tom Cruise and Sandra Bullock chief among them these days), actors generally don’t move the box office dial much when they appear in a generic film. But this weekend’s opening of Jason Bourne shows what the combination of the right actor in the right role can do. In spite of virtually identical reviews to 2012’s The Bourne Legacy, the new film, a franchise un-re-boot if you will, starring Matt Damon in the role he made iconic, will post a very solid $60 million this weekend. To be fair, that’s a bit behind the inflation-adjusted openings of The Bourne Ultimatum and The Bourne Supremacy, but it’s far better than the $38 million earned by Legacy when it debuted. More...

Weekend Predictions: Will Jason be a Bourne Again Box Office Hit?

July 28th, 2016

Jason Bourne

The month of July comes to an end this weekend and there are three wide releases hoping the month goes out on a high note. Jason Bourne is the only one with a shot at first place, while Bad Moms is looking to become a solid counter-programming hit. Meanwhile, Nerve opened on Wednesday and it just doesn’t want to slip between the cracks. As far as holdovers are concerned, Star Trek Beyond's daily numbers are average for the summer, but that will still be enough to hit the century mark over the weekend. It won’t be the only film to reach $100 million over the weekend. This weekend last year was led by Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation with $55.52 million. I don’t think Jason Bourne will top that, but since the second best film, Vacation, made less than $15 million, I think 2016 will win on depth. More...

2016 Preview: July

July 1st, 2016

The Secret Life of Pets

It's July 1st, which is Canada Day. To celebrate, I wanted to give a gift to my American readers down south, so here's a bunch of "u"s. U, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u, u. Now you can spell words like "colour" and "neighbour" correctly. As for the July preview... June wasn't a good month, despite Finding Dory being on pace to become the biggest hit of the year so far. Most other films failed to match expectations and as a result, 2016's lead over 2015 has nearly evaporated. In fact, ticket sales are below last year's pace. So how does July look in comparison? Well, last July, there were five films that earned more than $100 million, led by Minions, which earned more than $300 million. This July, there are five films that should earn more than $100 million, led by The Secret Life of Pets, which should earned around $250 million. I don't think July 2016 will live up to July 2015, but it should be close. Maybe if one of the expected midlevel hits is a surprise $100 million hit, or if two more of the $100 million hits crack $200 million, then the month will look great. Or one of the expected $100 million hits could flop and 2016 will actually fall behind 2015, even without taking into account ticket price inflation. More...

Home Market Releases for June 14th, 2016

June 14th, 2016

Hello, My Name is Doris

It is a much slower week than it was last time. In fact, the only two reviews this week were for releases that came out last week. That doesn't mean we don't have any good releases and there are a few contenders for Pick of the Week. Of these, Hello, My Name is Doris is the one I'm most interested in buying and the Blu-ray, while not loaded with extras, is the Pick of the Week. I'm also giving an honorary Puck of the Week to Dark Matter: Season 1, which is a Canadian Sci-fi series.

(On a side note, Amazon's list of new releases is a mess with a bunch of Game of Thrones and Star Trek titles, most of which don't even have images. This made sorting through the new releases a lot harder.) More...

Home Market Releases for May 10th, 2016

May 9th, 2016

Deadpool

It is officially the summer blockbuster season, which is historically the worst time of year for the home market. We are usually flooded with duds from January and February. However, this year we have the biggest hit of the year so far, Deadpool, which is coming out on DVD, Blu-ray Combo Pack, and 4K. Unless your eyesight is better than 20/20, 4k is not worth the upgrade, but the Blu-ray is the Pick of the Week. It isn't the only contender for that title. Mustang (DVD or Blu-ray) and The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane (Blu-ray) are also must haves. More...

Note: This list contains actors who appeared in at least two movies in the franchise.

PersonNr. of
Movies
RoleFranchise
Worldwide
Box Office
Career
Worldwide
Box Office
Franchise
/
Career
Matt Damon 4 Jason Bourne $1,385,570,207 $9,737,298,398 14.2%
Julia Stiles 4 Nicky Parsons $1,385,570,207 $2,507,861,349 55.2%
Joan Allen 3 Agent Helen Landy $1,035,400,440 $1,814,830,485 57.1%
Franka Potente 2 Marie St. Jaques $525,358,495 $991,783,866 53.0%
Brian Cox 2 Ward Abbott $525,358,495 $4,144,498,310 12.7%
David Strathairn 2 Noah Vosen $724,399,316 $3,576,977,200 20.3%
Gabriel Mann 2 Zorn $525,358,495 $679,699,211 77.3%
Scott Glenn 2 Ezra Kramer $724,399,316 $2,478,183,849 29.2%
Albert Finney 2 Dr. Albert Hirsch $724,399,316 $2,837,584,797 25.5%
Tom Gallop 2 Tom Cronlin $755,044,520 $1,149,050,267 65.7%
Chris Cooper 2 Conklin $525,358,495 $4,291,403,897 12.2%
Corey Johnson 2 Wills $724,399,316 $1,543,417,173 46.9%

Note: This list contains people who contributed to at least two movies in the franchise.

PersonNr. of
Movies
Technical RoleFranchise
Worldwide
Box Office
Career
Worldwide
Box Office
Franchise
/
Career
Frank Marshall 5 Producer (4)
Executive Producer (1)
$1,665,926,127 $14,831,921,954 11.2%
Robert Ludlum 5 Inspired by the "Bourne" Series Created by (3)
Screenwriter (1)
Executive Producer (1)
Based on Characters Created by (1)
$1,665,926,127 $1,672,426,127 99.6%
Tony Gilroy 4 Screenwriter (4)
Story Creator (2)
Director (1)
$1,249,757,811 $3,256,335,003 38.4%
Doug Liman 4 Executive Producer (3)
Director (1)
Producer (1)
$1,385,570,207 $2,685,671,783 51.6%
Henry Morrison 4 Executive Producer (4) $1,451,568,756 $1,451,568,756 100.0%
Patrick Crowley 4 Producer (4)
Unit Production Manager (2)
Assistant Director (1)
$1,249,757,811 $6,570,340,064 19.0%
Christopher Rouse 4 Editor (3)
Additional Editor (1)
Screenwriter (1)
Executive Producer (1)
$1,385,570,207 $2,937,647,994 47.2%
John Powell 4 Composer (4) $1,385,570,207 $14,955,958,979 9.3%
Paul Greengrass 3 Director (3)
Producer (1)
Screenwriter (1)
$1,171,212,836 $1,580,532,627 74.1%
Jeffrey M. Weiner 3 Executive Producer (2)
Producer (1)
$1,035,400,440 $1,035,400,440 100.0%
Oliver Wood 3 Cinematographer (3) $969,401,891 $3,661,039,251 26.5%
Dan Hegeman 3 Sound Effects Editor (3) $938,756,687 $11,327,662,431 8.3%
Paul L Sandberg 2 Producer (2) $755,044,520 $755,044,520 100.0%
Ben Smith 2 Producer (2) $696,524,236 $716,516,602 97.2%
Andrew R. Tennenbaum 2 Co-Producer (2) $525,358,495 $642,168,212 81.8%
Luc Etienne 2 Assistant Director (2) $525,358,495 $2,184,842,592 24.0%
Peter Wenham 2 Production Designer (1)
Supervising Art Director (1)
$755,044,520 $3,273,887,632 23.1%
Chris Carreras 2 Assistant Director (2)
Co-Producer (1)
$860,211,712 $6,903,351,924 12.5%
Colin O'Hara 2 Associate Producer (2) $727,169,440 $727,169,440 100.0%
Dan Bradley 2 Second Unit Director (2)
Stunt Coordinator (2)
$591,357,044 $6,120,821,727 9.7%
Scott Millan 2 Re-recording Mixer (2) $525,358,495 $9,983,673,650 5.3%
Bob Beemer 2 Re-recording Mixer (2) $525,358,495 $3,058,898,187 17.2%
Per Hallberg 2 Supervising Sound Editor (2) $525,358,495 $7,621,356,912 6.9%
Dan Hubbard 2 Casting Director (2) $727,169,440 $1,931,757,278 37.6%
Christopher Assells 2 Sound Effects Editor (2) $525,358,495 $4,417,866,564 11.9%
Dino R. Dimuro 2 Sound Effects Editor (2) $525,358,495 $2,012,126,863 26.1%
Peter Myles 2 Music Editor (2) $727,169,440 $4,342,029,387 16.7%
Kimaree Long 2 Dialogue Editor (2) $525,358,495 $1,270,949,415 41.3%
Igor Meglic 2 Second Unit Camera (2) $860,211,712 $12,759,435,138 6.7%
Joseph Middleton 2 Casting Director (2) $525,358,495 $3,004,026,633 17.5%