Bulgaria Box Office for The Boy Next Door (2015)
Theatrical Performance (US$) | ||
Bulgaria Box Office | $36,027 | Details |
Worldwide Box Office | $53,401,938 | Details |
Home Market Performance | ||
North America DVD Sales | $5,243,073 | Details |
North America Blu-ray Sales | $2,262,837 | Details |
Total North America Video Sales | $7,505,910 | |
Further financial details... |
Synopsis
The Boy Next Door is a psychological thriller that explores a forbidden attraction that goes much too far.
Metrics
Movie Details
Production Budget: | $4,000,000 |
Bulgaria Releases: | March 27th, 2015 (Wide) |
Video Release: | April 28th, 2015 by Universal Home Entertainment |
MPAA Rating: | R for violence, sexual content/nudity and language. (Rating bulletin 2333, 7/30/2014) |
Running Time: | 90 minutes |
Keywords: | Romance, Divorcée Romance, February / May Romance, One Night Stand, Obsession, Hot for Teacher, Non-Chronological, Voiceover/Narration, Infidelity, Orphan, Young Child Dealing with the Death of a Parent, Parricide, Digital Cinematography, Psychological Thriller, Erotic Thriller |
Source: | Original Screenplay |
Genre: | Thriller/Suspense |
Production Method: | Live Action |
Creative Type: | Contemporary Fiction |
Production/Financing Companies: | Blumhouse, Smart Entertainment, Nuyorican |
Production Countries: | United States |
Languages: | English |
DVD Sales: Paddington Pads Its Lead
May 27th, 2015
The top of the DVD sales chart were dominated by new releases with four of the top five DVDs new to the charts. This includes Paddington, which took top spot with 216,000 units / $3.24 million.
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Blu-ray Sales: Paddington Leads Parade of New Releases
May 27th, 2015
New releases took the top three spots on the Blu-ray sales chart, led by Paddington. The film sold 168,000 units and generated $3.35 million in sales. Its opening week Blu-ray share was 44%, which is amazing for a live action family film.
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DVD and Blu-ray Releases for April 28th, 2015
April 28th, 2015
This is usually a terrible time of year on the home market with the dredges of January and February coming out and precious little else. However, this week is actually really strong with not only one of the best films of the year, Paddington, as well as a number of summer shows coming out on TV on DVD. Unfortunately, it is also a really shallow week and with the May monthly preview due on Friday, I'm not even going to pretend it's a deep week and I'm ignoring anything below second-tier releases. As far as Pick of the Week is concerned, there are really only two contenders. The first is the aforementioned Paddington DVD or Blu-ray Combo Pack. The second is Mommy a Canadian movie coming out on DVD this week. Paddington is the Pick of the Week, but Mommy earns the rarely awarded Puck of the Week.
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Featured Blu-ray / DVD Review: Taken 3
April 27th, 2015
Taken 3 is the second movie I've reviewed this weekend. The first was atrocious, but unfortunately, this one earned even worse reviews. Is it that bad? Is it simply a mindless action film that can take up two hours of your life?
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Featured Blu-ray / DVD Review: The Boy Next Door
April 26th, 2015
The Boy Next Door only cost $4 million to make and even if its P&A budget was just north of $20 million, it made enough worldwide to cover that. All it needs to do on the home market is cover any additional production and advertising costs to break even. However, it earned reviews that were just 11% positive. Is it really this bad? Or were the critics unfairly harsh on the movie?
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Weekend Wrap-Up: Box Office was Less than Super
February 2nd, 2015
Super Bowl weekend was rough at the box office with only one film topping $10 million. That film was American Sniper, which completed the hat trick, but with less than expected. Second place went to Project Almanac, again earning less than expected, while Paddington was right behind in third place. Overall the box office fell 36% from last weekend, down to just $102 million. This is still 18% higher than the same weekend last year, so we have that to focus on. Year-to-date, 2015 has pulled in $994 million, which is 7.0% more than last year's pace of $929 million. Again, it is way too early to judge and as we saw last year, things can fall apart really quickly. That said, I will take any good news I can get.
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Weekend Predictions: Nothing Super about the New Releases
January 29th, 2015
There are three wide releases coming out this weekend, sort of. Project Almanac is the only film opening truly wide this weekend and it is easily the biggest of the three releases. The other two new releases, Black or White and The Loft, are both opening in below 2,000 theaters and neither has a real shot to open in the top five. This leaves American Sniper with an easy path to first place, but perhaps the Super Bowl will be bigger competition this weekend than any of the new releases were the last two weeks. This weekend last year, both new releases struggled and Ride Along was easily able to win, but with just $12 million. 2015 is going to crush 2014 in the year-over-year comparison.
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Weekend Wrap-Up: Sniper Stable, While Next Door Survives
January 27th, 2015
As expected, American Sniper earned first place, but it did so with a much stronger sophomore stint. As for the new releases, The Boy Next Door matched expectations (nearly) perfectly but the other two missed the Mendoza Line. Overall, the box office was down 21% to $159 million; however, this is good for a post-holiday weekend. Compared to last year, the overall box office was 37% higher. This kind of year-over-year growth usually only happens when holidays are misaligned. Year-to-date, 2015 is ahead of 2014 by 4.1% at $856 million to $823 million. It is obviously too soon to celebrate, but after last year's losses, I'll take any reason to be optimistic.
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Weekend Estimates: American Sniper Continues Box Office Domination
January 25th, 2015
After smashing the January weekend record last weekend, American Sniper is enjoying a very solid second-weekend hold. So solid, in fact, that it will also have the third-best January weekend. If it drops less than 35% next weekend, it will share with Avatar the records for the top six January weekends, each movie having topped $42 million three times. Sniper’s expected weekend this time around is $64.365m, according to Warner Bros. Sunday morning projection.
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Weekend Predictions: New Releases to Fall Victim to Sniper
January 22nd, 2015
There are three wide releases coming out this weekend: The Boy Next Door, Mortdecai, and Strange Magic. None of these movies are earning good reviews and none of them are likely to become even midlevel hits. As such, American Sniper will have a really, really easy time to repeat in top spot. It could drop by 80% and still earn first place this weekend. This weekend last year, the only wide release was I, Frankenstein, which bombed hard. I really hope none of the new releases open as poorly as that film did, but it is possible. Regardless, 2015 will win thanks to American Sniper's sophomore stint.
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Contest: A Bird in the Hand
January 16th, 2015
Next weekend there are three wide releases, The Boy Next Door, Mortdecai, and Strange Magic. Oh boy. This is the most January out of all of the January weeks. I really don't think any of them will even come close to becoming a midlevel hit, but one of them will have to be the target film for this week's box office prediction contest. I'm going with ... rolls a dice ... Mortdecai. In order to win, one must simply predict the opening weekend box office number for Mortdecai.
Whoever comes the closest to predicting the film's opening 3-day weekend box office (Friday to Sunday), without going over, will win a copy of White Bird in a Blizzard on DVD.
Whoever comes the closest to predicting the film's opening 3-day weekend box office (Friday to Sunday), without going under, will win a copy of Life's a Breeze on DVD.
Entries must be received by 10 a.m., Pacific Time on Friday to be eligible, so don't delay!
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2015 Preview: January
January 1st, 2015
2014 is over and for the most part, December was a soft ending to a weak year. This is bad news for two reasons. Firstly, it means the overall box office is still soft and it is unlikely that January will start strong. Secondly, last January was a great month, thanks in part to Frozen and other holdovers. The slump can't last forever and Taken 3 should help 2015 get off to a reasonably fast start and it even has a shot at $100 million. American Sniper got off to a really fast start in limited release, so it too could be a hit when it expands wide. By comparison, last January was led by Ride Along, but there were only two other films that didn't completely bomb. I want to say 2015 will start out on a winning note, but given the box office losing streak, it will likely pay to be pessimistic.
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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
Date | Rank | Gross | % Change | Screens | Per Screen | Total Gross | Week |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015/04/03 | 7 | $5,782 | 14 | $413 | $28,801 | 2 | |
2015/04/10 | 6 | $2,310 | -60% | 10 | $231 | $36,027 | 3 |
Box Office Summary Per Territory
Territory | Release Date |
Opening Weekend |
Opening Weekend Screens |
Maximum Screens |
Theatrical Engagements |
Total Box Office |
Report Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Argentina | 6/26/2015 | $16,736 | 15 | 15 | 16 | $21,262 | 11/24/2018 |
Austria | 3/19/2015 | $0 | 0 | 35 | 35 | $428,117 | 6/26/2015 |
Brazil | 3/26/2015 | $188,116 | 142 | 142 | 215 | $295,817 | 11/6/2018 |
Bulgaria | 3/27/2015 | $0 | 0 | 14 | 24 | $36,027 | 12/30/2018 |
France | 5/22/2015 | $177,792 | 0 | 0 | 0 | $177,792 | 8/21/2018 |
Germany | 3/19/2015 | $701,094 | 0 | 5 | 5 | $2,411,675 | 8/22/2018 |
Hong Kong | 3/13/2015 | $35,513 | 28 | 28 | 30 | $48,022 | 11/25/2018 |
Italy | 7/25/2015 | $268,271 | 0 | 0 | 0 | $738,410 | 11/7/2018 |
Mexico | 3/20/2015 | $366,139 | 0 | 0 | 0 | $1,367,745 | 8/30/2018 |
Netherlands | 3/12/2015 | $162,646 | 41 | 41 | 182 | $570,752 | 11/21/2018 |
North America | 1/23/2015 | $14,910,105 | 2,602 | 2,615 | 9,444 | $36,006,065 | 6/20/2016 |
Poland | 4/17/2015 | $105,835 | 0 | 0 | 0 | $343,097 | 12/30/2018 |
Russia (CIS) | 3/26/2015 | $563,103 | 470 | 470 | 931 | $842,577 | 11/19/2018 |
Slovenia | 3/19/2015 | $0 | 0 | 9 | 9 | $31,786 | 6/26/2015 |
Spain | 3/19/2015 | $443,610 | 239 | 239 | 700 | $1,559,502 | 11/28/2018 |
Taiwan | 2/27/2015 | $79,774 | 48 | 48 | 95 | $175,222 | 11/2/2018 |
Ukraine | 1/22/2015 | $147,000 | 77 | 77 | 77 | $147,000 | 12/30/2018 |
United Kingdom | 2/27/2015 | $627,102 | 337 | 337 | 649 | $1,231,032 | 2/6/2017 |
Uruguay | 3/19/2015 | $0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | $43,691 | 6/26/2015 |
Rest of World | $6,926,347 | ||||||
Worldwide Total | $53,401,938 | 12/30/2018 |
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
Jennifer Lopez | Claire Peterson |
Ryan Guzman | Noah Sandborn |
Supporting Cast
John Corbett | Garrett Peterson |
Ian Nelson | Kevin Peterson |
Kristin Chenoweth | Vicky Lansing |
Lexi Atkins | Allie Callahan |
Hill Harper | Principal Edward Warren |
Jack Wallace | Mr. Sandborn |
Adam Hicks | Jason Zimmer |
Francois Chau | Detective Johnny Chou |
Bailey Chase | Benny |
Kent Avenido | Mr. Avenido |
Travis Schuldt | Ethan |
Brian Mahoney | Couper |
Raquel Gardner | Barbara |
Kari Perdue | Rachel |
Chad Bullard | Chad the Bully |
Forrest Hoffman | Forrest Hoffman |
Brandon Rush | Paramedic |
For a description of the different acting role types we use to categorize acting perfomances, see our Glossary.
Production and Technical Credits
Rob Cohen | Director |
Barbara Curry | Screenwriter |
Jason Blum | Producer |
John Jacobs | Producer |
Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas | Producer |
Benny Medina | Producer |
Jennifer Lopez | Producer |
Couper Samuelson | Executive Producer |
Jeanette Volturno-Brill | Executive Producer |
Zac Unterman | Executive Producer |
David McFarland | Director of Photography |
Charles Varga | Production Designer |
Michel Aller | Editor |
Randy Edelman | Composer |
Nathan Barr | Composer |
Courtney Hoffman | Costume Designer |
Nancy Nayor | Casting Director |
Kathleen Courtney | Co-Producer |
Priscilla Porianda | Co-Producer |
Gerard DiNardi | Co-Producer |
Phillip Dawe | Associate Producer |
Kathleen Courtney | Unit Production Manager |
Gerard DiNardi | Assistant Editor |
Mic Rodgers | Second Unit Director |
Amanda J. Scarano | Production Supervisor |
Nancy Kirhoffer | Post-Production Supervisor |
Willie D. Burton | Sound Mixer |
Lisa Son | Set Decorator |
Elia P. Popov | Special Effects Coordinator |
Joseph Alexander Pancake | Special Effects Supervisor |
Christina Smith | Make up |
Carlton Coleman | Make up |
Barbara Lorenz | Hairstylist |
Jacklin Masteran | Hairstylist |
Anastasia Magoutas | Costume Supervisor |
Carmen Tabanyi | Script Supervisor |
Kelly Cabral | Supervising Sound Editor |
Aynee Osborn Joujon-Roche | Dialogue Editor |
Dan Leahy | Re-recording Mixer |
Kevin O'Connell | Re-recording Mixer |
Craig Hayes | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Mic Rodgers | Stunt Coordinator |
The bold credits above the line are the "above-the-line" credits, the other the "below-the-line" credits.