Mexico Box Office for Lucha Por La Libertad (2016)

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The Free State of Jones poster
Theatrical Performance (US$)
Mexico Box Office $174,407Details
Worldwide Box Office $23,237,252Details
Home Market Performance
North America DVD Sales $3,521,549 Details
North America Blu-ray Sales $2,828,537 Details
Total North America Video Sales $6,350,086
Further financial details...

Synopsis

The story of defiant Southern farmer, Newt Knight, and his extraordinary armed rebellion against the Confederacy. Banding together with other small farmers and local slaves, Knight launched an uprising that led Jones County, Mississippi to secede from the Confederacy, creating a Free State of Jones. Knight continued his struggle into Reconstruction, distinguishing him as a compelling, if controversial, figure of defiance long beyond the War.

Metrics

Movie Details

Production Budget:$50,000,000
Mexico Releases: August 12th, 2016 (Wide), released as Lucha Por La Libertad
Video Release: September 6th, 2016 by Universal Home Entertainment
MPAA Rating: R for brutal battle scenes and disturbing graphic images.
(Rating bulletin 2427 (Cert #50259), 6/1/2016)
Running Time: 139 minutes
Keywords: 1800s, Romance, Interracial Romance, Civil War, Historical Drama
Source:Based on Real Life Events
Genre:Drama
Production Method:Live Action
Creative Type:Historical Fiction
Production/Financing Companies: STX Entertainment, Route One, Union Investment Partners, Vendian Entertainment
Production Countries: United States
Languages: English

Theater Averages: Yerevan Highlight of Dark Weekend with an Average of $9,748

September 21st, 2016

3 Weeks in Yerevan

No films made it into the $10,000 club this past weekend, but 3 Weeks in Yerevan came really close with an average of $9,748 in three theaters. Another film, The Beatles: Eight Days a Week, did well with an average of $7,322 in 85 theaters. Sort of. In addition to playing in 85 theaters, there were another 80 theaters that had one-time showings over the weekend, which is why its total haul for the weekend is $771,153. I really hope having a mixed of regular showings and one-time screenings doesn’t catch on, because it makes our job of tracking box office numbers more confusing. More...

Home Market Releases for September 20th, 2016

September 20th, 2016

Labyrinth

It is not a great week on the home market, as the biggest release is Beauty and the Beast: 25th Anniversary. I’m still waiting for the screener, but I fear there will be less extras this time around. Modern Family: Season Seven was also a contender for Pick of the Week, but the light extras prevents it from earning that title. That leaves Labyrinth: 30th Anniversary Edition as the best of the week. More...

Home Market Releases for September 6th, 2016

September 6th, 2016

The Iron Giant

It is a big week with a ton of home market releases, including several that were contenders for Pick of the Week. There were two limited releases in that group, Love and Friendship and Tale of Tales. Love and Friendship got better reviews, but Tale of TalesBlu-ray is more interesting in my mind. Star Trek 50th Anniversary TV and Movie Collection is a great Blu-ray box set and would make an amazing gift. As for the Pick of the Week, that was an easy choice: The Iron Giant: Signature Edition on Blu-ray. Although if you are a hardcore fan, then the Ultimate Collector’s Edition might be worth the $75. More...

Weekend Wrap-Up: Dory Wins with $51.44 million, but Tarzan has Near Legendary Opening

July 6th, 2016

Finding Dory

The Fourth of July weekend went very well as two of the three new releases beat expectations. However, none of them were able to top Finding Dory, which earned its third win in a row. The Legend of Tarzan was very close in second place, which surprised a lot of analysts, but there might be a logical reason for its success. The Purge: Election Year more than tripled its production budget during its opening three-day weekend, so there’s no chance the studio isn’t giddy over that. The only real disappointment was The BFG, which got lost in the crowd. The overall box office was up from last week, which is a pleasant surprise. Granted, it grew by just under 1.0% to $192 million over the three-day weekend. More importantly, it was 41% higher than the same three-day weekend last year. Add in Monday, and the year-to-date lead rose to $120 million or 2.2% at $5.71 billion to $5.58 billion. More...

Weekend Wrap-Up: Dory Defeats Alien Invasion with $72.96 million

June 28th, 2016

Finding Dory

As predicted, Finding Dory repeated as the box office champion and came very close to matching our prediction with $72.96 million over the weekend. This is well above Independence Day: Resurgence's opening of $41.04 million. The Shallows was great as a low-budget horror film. The other two films... let's not talk about them. Overall, the box office fell 19% from last weekend to $188 million; however, this is to be expected, given how big Finding Dory opened. The weekend box office was even better than the same weekend last year, albeit by only 2.3%, which is not enough to keep up with inflation. Likewise, the year-over-year comparison is not great either. 2016 still leads 2015, but only by $5.38 billion to $5.31 billion, which is a lead of just 1.2%. Hopefully this weekend's win is a sign of things turning around, but I'm not so sure of that. More...

Weekend Estimates: Independence Day is Fish Food

June 26th, 2016

Finding-Dory

Independence Day: Resurgence is getting crushed at the box office this weekend, thanks in part to a strong second weekend for Finding Dory, but mostly because it failed where the original succeeded. Back in 1996, Independence Day pretty much invented the event movie, as it became the film everyone wanted to watch over the July 4 holiday weekend. Its $50.2 million 3-day weekend fell fractionally short of the then-record $52.8 million earned by Batman Forever over its opening weekend in June, 1995, but the $96.1 million it earned over its first five days was unprecedented. Resurgence had a storied past to live up to, and is falling well short. More...

Friday Estimates: Dory swims to $23.21 million, Resurgence shrinks to $16.8 million

June 25th, 2016

Finding Dory

Finding Dory held on to first place on Friday and that’s not good news, at least not for the box office as a whole. The film pulled in $23.21 million last night, which puts it on track to earn approximately $76 million. We predicted $74 million, so I’m calling this a victory. This will give the film close to $290 million after just ten days of release and puts it on pace to reach $300 million late Monday / early Tuesday. It will obviously hit $400 million at this pace, and it could become the first film of 2016 and the first animated film of all time to reach the $500 million milestone. That’s not a sure thing, but I think it’s at least 50/50 at this point. More...

Thursday Night Previews: Independence Day Doesn't Really Surge

June 24th, 2016

Independence Day: Resurgence

Independence Day: Resurgence started its box office run with $4 million during Thursday previews. That's not good. That's twice as much as the $2 million Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows earned a few weeks ago, but half as much as the $8.2 million X-Men: Apocalypse earned the week before that. It is identical to Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation, which opened last summer. If you compare its opening to all three films, taking into account Out of the Shadows' younger target audience and Apocalypse's Fanboy nature, then Resurgence will likely opened with between $50 million and $60 million. Hopefully it is performing better internationally. More...

Weekend Predictions: Will New Releases Challenge Top Spot? Or Will Dory just Keep Swimming?

June 23rd, 2016

Independence Day: Resurgence

This is the last weekend in June and there are three wide releases hoping to challenge Finding Dory for top spot. I don’t think any of them will come close. Independence Day: Resurgence is the only new release with a shot at first place and it should come out on top on Friday. It better win on Friday, or the month will end on a soft note. The Shallows and Free State of Jones will be fighting for fourth place. The Shallows cost less than $20 million, so a fourth place finish wouldn’t be a bad start. On the other hand, Free State of Jones cost $65 million to make, so a fourth place finish would be a disaster. Also opening this week is The Neon Demon. It isn’t opening wide, but it is opening wide enough to compete for a slot in the top ten. This weekend last year, there were two wide releases that earned less than $50 million combined. On the other hand, the top two films, Jurassic World and Inside Out both earned more than $50 million. Can the top four this year out-earn the top four last year? I think they can. We might get an actual win in the year-over-year comparison. More...

Contest: Surge of Independence

June 17th, 2016

Independence Day: Resurgence

Next weekend is the last weekend in June and unfortunately for the two wide releases coming out, the buzz for these films hasn't really grown. Independence Day: Resurgence is going to be the number one new release, although it likely won't earn first place. Free State of Jones could become STX Entertainment's biggest hit, but that's not saying much. Independence Day: Resurgence could earn more during its opening weekend than Free State of Jones earns during its box office run. As such, Independence Day: Resurgence is the only real choice for the target film in this week's Box Office Prediction contest. In order to win, one must simply predict the opening weekend box office number for Independence Day: Resurgence.

Whoever comes the closest to predicting the film's opening 3-day weekend box office (Friday to Sunday), without going over, will win a Frankenprize of previously reviews DVD and / or Blu-rays. I grabbed a few more boxes from storage, so we can do winner's choice again. The choices are, two movies, one TV on DVD release, three single-disc kids DVDs, or two items from the mystery box. Items from the mystery box are first come, first served, as I'm nearly out of them. Whoever comes the closest to predicting the film's opening 3-day weekend box office (Friday to Sunday), without going under, will also win a Frankenprize, as described above. Finally, we will be choosing an entrant from the group of people who haven't won, or haven't won recently, and they will win the final Frankenprize.

Entries must be received by 10 a.m., Pacific Time on Friday to be eligible, so don't delay! 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
2016/08/12 11 $174,407   0     $174,407 1

Box Office Summary Per Territory

Territory Release
Date
Opening
Weekend
Opening
Weekend
Screens
Maximum
Screens
Theatrical
Engagements
Total
Box Office
Report
Date
Australia 8/26/2016 $95,499 102 105 242 $212,811 9/12/2016
Bulgaria 1/27/2017 $2,953 0 0 0 $5,989 2/26/2019
France 9/16/2016 $415,658 0 0 0 $704,593 8/17/2018
Italy 12/2/2016 $243,174 0 0 0 $243,174 12/7/2016
Mexico 8/12/2016 $174,407 0 0 0 $174,407 8/16/2016
Netherlands 9/1/2016 $46,011 36 36 71 $82,004 9/14/2016
New Zealand 9/2/2016 $20,452 24 24 104 $54,864 12/5/2016
North America 6/24/2016 $7,572,206 2,815 2,815 7,511 $20,810,036
Portugal 7/1/2016 $29,210 35 35 97 $76,356 8/10/2016
South Korea 1/27/2018 $944 2 5 9 $19,592 2/21/2018
Spain 9/16/2016 $314,470 235 235 587 $699,014 10/21/2016
United Kingdom 9/30/2016 $154,412 226 226 226 $154,412 10/5/2016
 
Worldwide Total$23,237,252 2/26/2019

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

Matthew McConaughey Newton Knight

Supporting Cast

Gugu Mbatha-Raw Rachel
Mahershala Ali Moses Washington
Keri Russell Serena Knight
Jacob Lofland Daniel
Sean Bridgers Sumrall
Jessica Collins Annie
Eliza Bennett Junie Lee
Christopher Berry Jasper Collins
Wayne Pére Col. Robert Lowry
Brian Lee Franklin Davis Knight
Donald Watkins Wilson
Bill Tangradi Lt. Barbour
Thomas Francis Murphy Col. Elias Hood
Joe Chrest James Eakins

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

Production and Technical Credits

Gary Ross Director
Gary Ross Screenwriter
Leonard Hartman Story by
Gary Ross Story by
Jon Kilik Producer
Scott Stuber Producer
Gary Ross Producer
Leonard Hartman Executive Producer
Michael Bassick Executive Producer
Christopher Woodrow Executive Producer
Oren Aviv Executive Producer
Robin Bissell Executive Producer
Leonard Feder* Executive Producer
Adam Fogelson Executive Producer
Stuart Ford Executive Producer
T.G. Herrington Executive Producer
Matt Jackson Executive Producer
Russell Levine Executive Producer
Chris Lytton Executive Producer
Bruce Nachbar Executive Producer
Robert Simonds Executive Producer
Donald Tang Executive Producer
Wang Zhongjun Executive Producer
Wang Zhonglei Executive Producer
Jae Woo Lee Executive Producer
Jerry Ye Executive Producer
Benoit Delhomme Director of Photography
Philip Messina Production Designer
Juliette Welfling Editor
Pamela Martin Editor
Louise Frogley Costume Designer
Nicholas Britell Composer
Debra Zane Casting Director
Meagan Lewis Casting Director
Lucinda Williams Song Writer
Kelly Port Visual Effects Supervisor
Diana Alvarez Co-Producer
Eric Heffron Co-Producer
Samuel Y. Ha Co-Executive Producer
Elexa Ruth Co-Executive Producer
Jason Markey Music Supervisor
Dan Webster Supervising Art Director
Andrew Max Cahn Art Director
Chris Craine Art Director
Larry Dias Set Decorator
Pud Cusack Sound Mixer
Paul Hsu Supervising Sound Editor
Mike Prestwood Smith Re-recording Mixer
Paul Hsu Re-recording Mixer
Nikos Kalaitzidis Visual Effects Supervisor
David Nami Special Effects Supervisor
Sandino Moya-Smith Associate Producer
Eric Heffron Assistant Director
Randall Wilkins Set Designer
Christopher T. Sadler Second Assistant Director

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