Market Charts > 2011 > Distributors > Lionsgate

Box Office Performance for Lionsgate Movies in 2011

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RankMovieRelease
Date
GenreMPAA
Rating
2011 GrossTickets Sold
1 The Lincoln Lawyer Mar 18, 2011 Thriller/Suspense R $58,009,200 7,315,157
2 Madea’s Big Happy Family Apr 22, 2011 Comedy PG-13 $53,345,287 6,727,022
3 Abduction Sep 23, 2011 Thriller/Suspense PG-13 $28,087,155 3,541,885
4 Conan the Barbarian Aug 19, 2011 Action R $21,295,021 2,685,374
5 Warrior Sep 9, 2011 Drama PG-13 $13,657,115 1,722,208
6 From Prada to Nada Jan 28, 2011 Romantic Comedy PG-13 $3,033,623 382,550
7 Rabbit Hole Dec 17, 2010 Drama PG-13 $1,793,829 226,207
8 Salvando al Soldado Perez Sep 2, 2011 Action PG-13 $1,400,726 176,636
9 The Devil's Double Jul 29, 2011 Drama R $1,361,512 171,691
10 No Eres Tu, Soy Yo Apr 8, 2011 Romantic Comedy PG-13 $1,339,911 168,967
11 Go For It! May 13, 2011 Drama PG-13 $180,237 22,728
12 Pastorela Dec 2, 2011 Comedy R $161,194 20,327
13 Labios Rojos Oct 14, 2011 Comedy R $136,163 17,170
14 For Colored Girls Nov 5, 2010 Drama R $52,924 6,673
15 The Next Three Days Nov 19, 2010 Thriller/Suspense PG-13 $19,303 2,434
Total Gross of All Movies$183,873,200
Total Tickets Sold23,187,029

Note: This chart ranks movies by the amount they earned during 2011. It includes movies released in previous years that earned money during 2011. For example, a movie released over Thanksgiving in 2010 will most likely earn money in 2010 and 2011. Click on the individual movie to see its total gross over all the years in which it played.

Inflation-adjusted figures are based ticket sale estimates, and may not be precise due to rounding errors.

Our Theatrical Market pages are based on the Domestic Theatrical Market performance only. The Domestic Market is defined as the North American movie territory (consisting of the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and Guam).

The yearly amounts on our Theatrical Market pages are based on box office years. Each box office year starts on the first Monday of the year, so the previous year ends on the Sunday before the first Monday. For example, the "2017 box office year" started on January 2, 2017 so the "2016 box office year" ended on Sunday, January 1, 2017.