Poland Box Office for The Loft (2014)

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The Loft poster
Theatrical Performance (US$)
Poland Box Office $235,662Details
Worldwide Box Office $11,401,518Details
Home Market Performance
North America DVD Sales $1,172,874 Details
North America Blu-ray Sales $512,051 Details
Total North America Video Sales $1,684,925
Further financial details...

Synopsis

Five married guys conspire to secretly share a penthouse loft in the city—a place where they can carry out hidden affairs and indulge in their deepest fantasies. But the fantasy becomes a nightmare when they discover the dead body of an unknown woman in the loft, and they realize one of the group must be involved. Paranoia seizes them as everyone begins to suspect one another. Friendships are tested, loyalties are questioned and marriages crumble as the group is consumed by fear, suspicion and murder.

Metrics

Movie Details

Poland Releases: February 20th, 2015 (Wide)
Video Release: May 26th, 2015 by Universal Home Entertainment
MPAA Rating: R for sexual content, nudity, bloody violence, language and some drug use.
(Rating bulletin 2255, 1/16/2013)
Running Time: 108 minutes
Keywords: Remake, Foreign-Language Remake, Non-Chronological, Infidelity, Suicide, Faked Suicide, Prostitution, Framed, Narcotics, Surprise Twist, Relationships Gone Wrong, Erotic Thriller, Director Remaking Their Own Movie
Source:Remake
Genre:Thriller/Suspense
Production Method:Live Action
Creative Type:Contemporary Fiction
Production/Financing Companies: Anonymous Content, Woestijnvis
Production Countries: United States
Languages: English

Home Market Numbers: Sniper Steady on Top

June 14th, 2015

American Sniper

The week ending May 31 was a terrible week for new releases with only one that sold more than 50,000 units on the combined home market chart. Fortunately, American Sniper held on a lot better than most releases do, and was down just 27% to 844,000 units/ $16.01 million in consumer spending for the week, giving it totals of 1.99 million units / $37.40 million after two weeks of release. It is now in fifth place on the 2015 combined chart, but again, given its box office, it should be higher. More...

DVD and Blu-ray Releases for May 26th, 2015

May 25th, 2015

Welcome to Me

Wow. It is a summer week on the home market, as there are a ton of summer shows coming out on DVD. Unfortunately, none of them seem like big sellers. The best-selling new release of the week is Seventh Son, which is a terrible sign. The second best is The Nanny: The Complete Series. I don't know how to react to that. As for the best of the new releases, Magician: The Astonishing Life and Work of Orson Wells (DVD or Blu-ray) is as good as it gets. More...

Weekend Wrap-Up: SpongeBob Stands Tall

February 9th, 2015

The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water poster

As expected, The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water led the way at the box office; however, it did so in a much more explosive way. In fact, its opening was in the top five for February releases. The other two new releases, Jupiter Ascending and Seventh Son, did as well as expected, more or less, but that's not really a good thing. The overall weekend box office was $152 million, which was 51% more than last weekend. Compared to the same weekend last year, 2015 actually came out ahead, albeit by 0.3% margin. This is less than ticket price inflation, so fewer tickets were sold, but I don't really care. Considering I thought 2015 would lose by close to $20 million, I will take any victory and celebrate it. Year-to-date, 2015 has pulled ahead of 2014 by nearly $100 million at $1.17 billion to $1.08 billion. Again, it is too soon to judge how well 2015 will do, but being ahead by 8.8% is still worth noting. More...

Weekend Wrap-Up: Box Office was Less than Super

February 2nd, 2015

American Sniper poster

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. More...

Weekend Predictions: Nothing Super about the New Releases

January 29th, 2015

Project Almanac poster

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. More...

2015 Preview: January

January 1st, 2015

Taken 3 poster

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. More...

Weekend Box Office Performance

Box Office Summary Per Territory

Territory Release
Date
Opening
Weekend
Opening
Weekend
Screens
Maximum
Screens
Theatrical
Engagements
Total
Box Office
Report
Date
Germany 12/12/2014 $0 0 0 0 $1,446,657 8/22/2018
Hong Kong 4/10/2015 $47,489 14 14 28 $98,079 11/26/2018
Mexico 5/15/2015 $174,336 0 0 0 $484,957 9/7/2018
North America 1/30/2015 $2,747,342 1,841 1,841 4,028 $6,002,684 5/7/2020
Peru 10/8/2015 $0 0 6 8 $87,227 12/30/2018
Poland 2/20/2015 $79,521 0 0 0 $235,662 12/30/2018
Russia (CIS) 2/6/2015 $341,751 542 542 948 $646,959 11/19/2018
South Korea 10/1/2015 $0 0 2 3 $35,281 10/20/2015
Turkey 4/10/2015 $49,014 67 68 161 $117,325 12/30/2018
 
Rest of World $2,246,687
 
Worldwide Total$11,401,518 5/7/2020

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.

Lead Ensemble Members

Karl Urban Vincent Stevens
James Marsden Chris Vanowen
Wentworth Miller Luke Seacord
Eric Stonestreet Marty Landry
Matthias Schoenaerts Philip Trauner

Supporting Cast

Isabel Lucas Sarah Deakins
Rachael Taylor Anne Morris
Rhona Mitra Alison Vanowen
Valerie Cruz Barbara Stevens
Kali Rocha Mimi Landry
Elaine Cassidy Ellie Seacord
Margarita Levieva Vicky Fry
Kristin Lehman Detective Huggins
Robert Wisdom Detective Cohagan
Ric Reitz Joel Kotkin
Graham Beckel Hiram Fry
Kathy Deitch Dana
Madison Burge Zoe Trauner
Cindi Woods Mrs. Fry
Laura Cayouette Mrs. Kotkin
Barbara Dzikanowice Prostitute
Kim Ormiston Party Girl
Misty Ormiston Party Girl
Griff Furst Zoe's Friend
Eric Dickinson Zoe's Friend
Dennis Raymond Bagneris Bar Slickster Guy
Leticia Jimenez Bar Slickster Girl
Bill Scharpf Security Guard
Trace Cheramie Security Guard

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

Production and Technical Credits

Erik Van Looy Director
Wesley Strick Screenwriter
Bart De Pauw Story Creator
Paul Green Producer
Adam Shulman Producer
Hilde de Laere Producer
Matt DeRoss Producer
Barbara Kelly Executive Producer
Steve Golin Executive Producer
Wesley Strick Executive Producer
Wim Tack Executive Producer
Wouter Vandenhaute Executive Producer
Eric Watte Executive Producer
Nicolas Karakatsanis Director of Photography
Maia Javan Production Designer
Eddie Hamilton Editor
John Frizzell Composer
Barbara Fiorentino Casting Director
Carole Sanders Peterman Unit Production Manager
Barbara Kelly Unit Production Manager
Guy De Lombaert Unit Production Manager
Richard Cowan Assistant Director
Jim Gelarden Art Director
Cindy Slagter Set Decorator
Domenic Silvestri Set Designer
Ann Van Aken Script Supervisor
Jonathan Gaynor Sound Mixer
Miccael Uguccioni Visual Effects Supervisor
Liz Staub Costume Designer
Allison Gordin Make up
Darryl Lucas Make up
Donna Spahn-Jones Hairstylist
Yolanda Mercadel Hairstylist
Matt Kutcher Special Effects Supervisor
Donnie Dean Special Effects Coordinator
Peter Flamman Supervising Sound Editor
Peter Flamman Sound Designer
Wart Wamsteker Sound Designer
Dennis Kersten Sound Editor
Tom Ozanich Re-recording Mixer
Stephanie L. Flack Dialogue Editor
Frederik Wiedmann Score Mixer
Brian Richards Music Editor
Philip Moross Executive Music Producer
Laura Katz Music Supervisor
Jeffrey Galpin Stunt Coordinator

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