Zac Efron
Best known as a Leading Actor based on credits in that role in 18 films, with $1,280,087,286 worldwide aggregate box office (rank #191) |
Best-known acting roles: Phillip (The Greatest Showman), Ted (Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax), Teddy Sanders (Neighbors), Link Larkin (Hairspray), Matt Brody (Baywatch) |
Best-known technical roles: That Awkward Moment (Executive Producer) |
Most productive collaborators: Hugh Jackman, Michael Gracey, Michael Arndt, Bill Condon, Michelle Williams |
Born: October 18, 1987 (36 years old) |
Career Summary
Movies | Domestic Box Office | International Box Office | Worldwide Box Office | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
As an Actor | Leading | 18 | $698,379,358 | $581,707,928 | $1,280,087,286 |
Lead Ensemble Member | 9 | $419,448,706 | $691,525,904 | $1,110,974,610 | |
Supporting | 3 | $140,311,641 | $92,372,837 | $232,684,478 | |
Inverviewee | 1 | $0 | $0 | $0 | |
(Unclassified) | 3 | $379,791 | $6,450 | $386,241 | |
In Technical Roles | Executive Producer | 1 | $26,068,955 | $27,000,000 | $53,068,955 |
Career Trend
This graph shows Zac Efron’s score on our annual analysis of leading stars at the box office. The Star Score represents points assigned to each of the leading stars of the top 100 movies (based on box office) in the current year and two preceding years. For appearing in the number one movie in a year a star gets 100 points, the number two movie 99 points and so on..
Latest Ranking on Selected Box Office Record Lists
Record | Rank | Amount |
---|---|---|
Top 100 Stars in Leading Roles at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 101-200) | 182 | $1,117,828,064 |
Top Stars at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 801-900) | 809 | $1,258,519,496 |
Top 100 Stars in Leading Roles at the International Box Office (Rank 201-300) | 224 | $1,273,233,832 |
Top Stars at the International Box Office (Rank 1,101-1,200) | 1,131 | $1,365,613,119 |
Top 100 Stars in Leading Roles at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 201-300) | 212 | $2,391,061,896 |
Top Stars at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 901-1,000) | 961 | $2,624,132,615 |
Highest Grossing Stars of 2019 at the International Box Office | 94 | 122 |
Highest Grossing Stars of 2019 at the Worldwide Box Office | 98 | 128 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 2,901-3,000) | 3,000 | $26,068,955 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the International Box Office (Rank 2,801-2,900) | 2,817 | $27,000,000 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 2,901-3,000) | 2,975 | $53,068,955 |
See the Acting Credits tab for all Acting Box Office Records and the Technical Credits tab for all Technical Box Office Records.
Theater counts: Doctor Strange repeats as Firestarter and Family Camp open wide
May 12th, 2022
After an impressive opening week at the box office, Doctor-Strange in the Multiverse of Madness holds steady with its opening theater count of 4,534 theaters. The latest Marvel feature snagged an eye-opening $187.4 million in its opening weekend and currently enjoys a domestic cume of just shy of $223 million, with a worldwide total of $532 million. The film’s opening weekend places it comfortably in 11th on the record opening weekends chart, just ahead of Incredibles 2’s $182.4 million and just behind Avengers: Age of Ultron’s $191 million.
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Theater counts: Doctor Strange will debut in post-pandemic record 4,534 theaters
May 5th, 2022
The wait is finally over for fans of Dr. Stephen Strange as the sequel to Doctor Strange is finally at the doorstep of North American theaters. Doctor-Strange in the Multiverse of Madness will open in an outstanding 4,534 locations (including IMAX) this weekend, which places it seventh on the all-time widest openings list, nestled between two animated sequels, 2017’s Despicable Me 3 (4,529 theaters) and 2019’s The Secret Life of Pets 2 (4,561 theaters). It’s over 100 more locations than The Batman, which arrived in 4,417 locations just over two months ago, giving Multiverse of Madness the widest opening of the post-pandemic era.
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Firestarter trailer
May 3rd, 2022
Supernatural horror movie, starring Zac Efron and Ryan Kiera Armstrong opens in theaters and on Peacock on May 13 ... Full Movie Details.
For more than a decade, parents Andy and Vicky have been on the run, desperate to hide their daughter Charlie from a shadowy federal agency that wants to harness her unprecedented gift for creating fire into a weapon of mass destruction. Andy has taught Charlie how to defuse her power, which is triggered by anger or pain. But as Charlie turns 11, the fire becomes harder and harder to control. After an incident reveals the family’s location, a mysterious operative is deployed to hunt down the family and seize Charlie once and for all. Charlie has other plans.
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Analysis: Films Like The Greatest Showman Should Be Considered Trendsetters, Not Flukes
February 1st, 2018
The Greatest Showman’s box office life has almost mirrored that of a cliché Broadway musical. Before release, no one believed in its dreams: an $84 million circus musical starring Hugh Jackman and Zac Efron that was mocked by the bullies on film Twitter. It even had its darkest moment when it debuted at #4 with just $8.8 million, a definite sign of a total bomb. But then the rallying moment, as the film defied the odds and just kind of stuck around at #4 (and, on one weekend, #5) for 5 weeks straight, each weekend making more than its opening. Now the film’s soundtrack has reached #1 on the Billboard Top 100 albums, #1 on iTunes, and has over 200 million plays on Spotify. Two of the songs (“This is Me” and “Rewrite the Stars”) have been listened to over 50 million times each on Spotify (in comparison, the Spanish version of “Remember Me” from Coco has been listened to 12 million times). The film has earned a Golden Globe for Best Song and an Academy Award nomination for the same song. And, of course, it has shockingly earned over $100 million domestically. It currently stands at $128.2 million, which makes it the 15th-highest-grossing musical of all time, and it will climb higher on that list.
The Greatest Showman Trailer
November 13th, 2017
Musical starring Hugh Jackman, Zac Efron, Rebecca Ferguson, and Michelle Williams opens December 20 ... Full Movie Details.
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The Greatest Showman Trailer
July 11th, 2017
Drama starring Hugh Jackman, Zac Efron, Rebecca Ferguson, and Michelle Williams opens December 25 ... Full Movie Details.
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Weekend Predictions: Will New Releases Make a Splash, or are They Dead in the Water?
May 25th, 2017
It’s Memorial Day long weekend, which is historically one of the best long weekends at the box office all year. However, this year the two new releases are far from the best. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales has the worst reviews in the franchise and its domestic box office will likely be the same. Sadly, Baywatch’s reviews are even worse. That said, they should still finish one-two over the weekend, while Alien: Covenant and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2 will be in a race for third place. It likely won’t be close. Meanwhile, this weekend last year, X-Men: Apocalypse and Alice Through the Looking Glass opened one-two during the weekend with results that are similar to what Dead Men Tell No Tales / Baywatch are expected to make. I don’t know if 2017 will win in the year-over-year comparison, but it should be close.
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2017 Preview: May
May 1st, 2017
April is over and thank god for that. The Fate of the Furious is currently the only film that was better than a midlevel hit, while Going in Style might end up being the second-biggest release of the month. On the low end, there were seven films on last month’s list that didn’t even manage to open in truly wide release (2,000 or more theaters). Fortunately, May looks a lot brighter. Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2 should dominate the chart and get the month off to a fast start. Furthermore, every week there’s at least one film with a reasonable chance of earning $100 million domestically. Additionally, last May wasn’t particularly strong, so that should help 2017 overall. Granted, Captain America: Civil War earned more than $400 million, so the month got off to a fast start, but films struggled the rest of the way. The second-biggest film was X-Men: Apocalypse at just $155 million, while only one other movie, The Angry Birds Movie, earned more than $100 million. Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2 should at least be competitive with Captain America: Civil War, allowing 2017 to win thanks to its superior depth.
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Baywatch Trailer
December 8th, 2016
Summer comedy starring Dwayne Johnson, Zac Efron opens May 26 ... Full Movie Details.
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2016 Preview: July
July 1st, 2016
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.
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2016 Preview: May
May 1st, 2016
April started on a soft note and ended weak, but thanks to The Jungle Book, overall the month was actually really good. That's what happens when you get a surprise $300 million hit. This bodes well for May, which is both a slow month and a fantastic month. There are only four weekends and only eight movies coming out, but of those eight films, five have a shot at $100 million. The potential blockbusters are led by Captain America: Civil War, which is not only going to be the biggest hit of the month, but according to a Fandango survey, it is the most anticipated film of the summer. (On a side note, Finding Dory is the most anticipated family film of the summer and Ghostbusters is the most anticipated comedy of the summer. I was surprised by the last result.) Both Alice Through the Looking Glass and X-Men: Apocalypse have real shots at $200 million. One of them could get to $300 million, if they weren't opening against each other. Overall, the month looks excellent. Even better, last May there was only one monster hit, The Avengers: Age of Ultron, and most analysts think Captain America: Civil War will beat it at the box office. (There's also the issue of the misalignment in the weekends, which hurt April, but will really help May.)
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Weekend Predictions: Will Fifth Wave Open in the Top Five?
January 21st, 2016
Three wide releases are coming out this week, all of which are expected to earn similar openings. None of which are expected to compete for the top five. The 5th Wave is the latest Young Adult Adaptation and as I'm writing this at about 10 am on Thursday, it is still the only new release with any reviews. Dirty Grandpa is the widest release of the week, but with no reviews, it is hard to judge how well it will do. Finally there's The Boy. If it can match The Forest, I'm sure STX Entertainment will be happy. The weakness in the new releases doesn't mean we won't have a new number one film, as The Revenant seems poised to climb to first place over the weekend. This weekend last year, American Sniper remained dominant with nearly $65 million. It's a near certainty that all three new releases won't make that much this year. There's a chance the top five combined won't make that much this year. 2016 is going to lose in the year-over-year comparison.
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2016 Preview: January
January 1st, 2016
2016 will begin the same way 2015 ended, with Star Wars: The Force Awakens on top. In fact, three of the five films that have the best shot at box office success in January are The Force Awakens, The Hateful Eight, and The Revenant, all of which opened in December. There are two true January releases that could also do really well, for this time of year: Ride Along 2 and Kung Fu Panda 3. The rest of the releases are just hoping to become midlevel hits. Last January, American Sniper dominated earning more than $300 million. Its success could prevent 2016 from being ahead in the year-over-year comparison by the end of the month, but this year does have better depth.
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2015 Preview: August
August 1st, 2015
It is still a little too soon to tell how July will finish, as we don't have any numbers for the final weekend at the time of writing. We know Minions was a monster hit and that Ant-man will be a financial success. However, until we see how Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation does, it will be impossible to call the month a true success. If Rogue Nation bombed this weekend, then the month is only a partial success. It would also mean the summer of 2015 could be coming to an abrupt end. As for August, only Fantastic Four has a better than 50/50 chance of reaching $100 million; although some people think Straight Outta Compton also has a shot at that milestone. Besides those two, only a couple of other films even have a realistic shot at becoming midlevel hits. Worse still, last August was amazing with Guardians of the Galaxy breaking records. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles also did better than expected with a domestic haul of nearly $200 million. No release this August is going to match that figure. There's a good chance the top two releases combined won't do so. Fortunately, 2015 has a sizable lead over 2014, so even a soft month will keep 2015 ahead in the year-over-year comparison.
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2014 - Holiday Gift Guide - Part I
November 26th, 2014
This Thursday is Thanksgiving, which means this is Black Friday and Cyber Monday, and a ton of shopping. It also means the first installment of our Holiday Gift Guide. Over the next month, we will talk about TV on DVD releases, independent releases, foreign language releases, classics, etc. but this week we start with Major Movie Releases. These are first run releases, franchise box sets, etc. In some ways, this is better than last year, as there were a wider number of big releases that would make great gifts. However, in other ways it is much weaker. I can't think of a single big franchise box set that came out this year. There are some smaller ones, like the Halloween Box Set, but while the franchise has lasted ten installments and 30 years, how many can you really say are worth repeated viewing? Fortunately, there were plenty of great films to come out this year, starting with what is currently the biggest hit of the year.
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Featured Blu-ray / DVD Review: Neighbors
September 22nd, 2014
This summer was terrible at the box office with no $250 million hits throughout the summer until Guardians of the Galaxy opened in August. That said, there were a number of smaller movies that did quite well at the box office. Neighbors, for instance, cost less than $20 million to make, but pulled in $150 million at the box office. Was it a hit because of its quality? Or did it benefit from the weakness in the tentpole releases?
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Weekend Estimates: Neighbors Tops $50 Million
May 11th, 2014
Comedy triumphs at the box office this weekend, with Neighbors posting an impressive $51 million, according to Universal’s Sunday morning estimate. That’s the 16th-biggest opening ever for a comedy film (depending somewhat on one’s definition of what constitutes a comedy), and comparable to the debut of Ted (which made $54 million in 2012). It’s also easily Seth Rogen’s best weekend, ahead of the $33.5 million debut for The Green Hornet, and Zac Efron’s best, beating High School Musical: Senior Year.
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2014 Preview: May
May 1st, 2014
It has been a great year so far and April was again a strong month. The box office was led by Captain America: The Winter Soldier, as it became the second film of the year to reach $200 million, while Rio 2 is on pace to become the seventh $100 million hit of the year. Big picture, 2014 has already hit $3 billion, which isn't a record for this time of the year, but it is $250 million ahead of 2013. That streak ends in May. Don't get me wrong. There are six films opening this month that at least have a shot at $100 million and two of those should earn more than $200 million and there are two others that at least have a shot at that milestone. Leading the way is The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which is looking to top The Winter Soldier and become the second biggest hit of the year so far. Its main competition this month is X-men: Days of Future Past, while Godzilla also has a shot at $200 million. Unfortunately, this month last year, Iron Man 3 earned more than $400 million, while two other films took in $200 million and seven films in total reached the century mark. That is going to be really hard to replicate this year and 2014 will likely lose some of its lead over 2013. Fortunately, 2014 has such a big lead that unless the box office really slumps, it will end the month with at least a small lead over 2013.
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2014 Preview: January
January 1st, 2014
It's the first month of the new year, but the biggest hit might be a film released in December. Last month ended on a slow note with all five Christmas day releases failing to become hits, some more than others. (It's a little too soon to tell if The Wolf of Wall Street or The Secret Life of Walter Mitty will do well enough to break even any time soon, but neither is a serious hit.) There are still some December releases that will likely remain on the charts through the opening weekends of January, while there are some films that opened in limited release last month with a scheduled wide release this month. Of the purely January releases, I would guess Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit will be the biggest hit. Even then, it won't live up to the previous films in the franchise, even if you don't take inflation into account. Most of the rest of the new releases will be happy if they can become midlevel hits. Last January was led by Mama, which earned more than $70 million. I think Shadow Recruit will top that figure at the box office, while there are a similar number of likely box office bombs opening this year as there were last year. 2014 could start out ahead of 2013's pace, but it likely won't be a huge difference either way.
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DVD and Blu-ray Releases for August 27th, 2013
August 26th, 2013
It's a terrible week on the home market. There's not a lot in terms of top sellers, although The Great Gatsby should lead the way. The only first-run release is Pain and Gain, which will likely not sell a lot on the home market. There are a few TV on DVD releases to fill in the gaps, like The Walking Dead or Elementary; however, by the end of the first page of new releases on Amazon.com, we run into filler. As for Pick of the Week, the best is The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh on Blu-ray Combo Pack. I'm still waiting for the screener, but it is such a good movie and it is slow week that it is still Pick of the Week.
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All Acting Credits
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Release Date | Title | Role | Domestic Box Office | International Box Office | Worldwide Box Office |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020-2029 | Three Men and a Baby | ||||
Jun 28, 2024 | A Family Affair | ||||
Mar 7, 2024 | Ricky Stanicky | ||||
Dec 22, 2023 | The Iron Claw | Kevin Von Erich | $35,611,828 | $7,188,693 | $42,800,521 |
May 13, 2022 | Firestarter | Andy McGee | $9,739,250 | $5,290,994 | $15,030,244 |
Mar 11, 2022 | Gold | Man One | $100,197 | $153,585 | $253,782 |
May 15, 2020 | Scoob! | Fred Jones | $2,188,425 | $24,087,786 | $26,276,211 |
May 3, 2019 | Extremely Wicked, Shoc… | Ted Bundy | $9,852,577 | $9,852,577 | |
Mar 29, 2019 | The Beach Bum | Flicker | $3,502,600 | $765,208 | $4,267,808 |
Dec 20, 2017 | The Greatest Showman | Phillip | $174,340,174 | $254,714,030 | $429,054,204 |
Dec 1, 2017 | The Disaster Artist | Dan Janjigian | $21,120,616 | $7,597,051 | $28,717,667 |
May 25, 2017 | Baywatch | Matt Brody | $58,060,186 | $117,803,597 | $175,863,783 |
Jul 8, 2016 | Mike and Dave Need Wed… | Dave Stangle | $46,009,673 | $29,888,427 | $75,898,100 |
May 20, 2016 | Neighbors 2: Sorority … | Teddy Sanders | $55,340,730 | $53,416,891 | $108,757,621 |
Jan 22, 2016 | Dirty Grandpa | Jason Kelly | $35,593,113 | $69,485,336 | $105,078,449 |
Aug 28, 2015 | We Are Your Friends | Cole | $3,591,417 | $6,561,998 | $10,153,415 |
Nov 7, 2014 | 21 Years: Richard Link… | Himself | |||
May 9, 2014 | Neighbors | Teddy Sanders | $150,086,800 | $120,857,628 | $270,944,428 |
Jan 31, 2014 | That Awkward Moment | Jason | $26,068,955 | $27,000,000 | $53,068,955 |
Oct 4, 2013 | Parkland | Dr. Jim Carrico | $641,439 | $974,914 | $1,616,353 |
Apr 24, 2013 | At Any Price | $379,791 | $510 | $380,301 | |
Oct 5, 2012 | The Paperboy | Jack Jansen | $677,200 | $3,350,463 | $4,027,663 |
Sep 14, 2012 | Liberal Arts | Nat | $319,176 | $824,774 | $1,143,950 |
Apr 20, 2012 | The Lucky One | Logan | $60,457,138 | $36,176,695 | $96,633,833 |
Mar 2, 2012 | Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax | Ted | $214,151,550 | $136,946,253 | $351,097,803 |
Dec 9, 2011 | New Year’s Eve | Paul | $54,544,638 | $92,305,635 | $146,850,273 |
Jul 30, 2010 | Charlie St. Cloud | Charlie St. Cloud | $31,206,263 | $17,271,821 | $48,478,084 |
Nov 25, 2009 | Me and Orson Welles | Richard Samuels | $1,190,003 | $1,190,003 | |
Apr 17, 2009 | 17 Again | Mike O' Donnell | $64,167,069 | $75,307,837 | $139,474,906 |
Oct 24, 2008 | High School Musical 3:… | Troy Bolton | $90,559,416 | $183,833,464 | $274,392,880 |
Dec 11, 2007 | High School Musical 2 | Troy Bolton | |||
Jul 20, 2007 | Hairspray | Link Larkin | $118,871,849 | $83,951,012 | $202,822,861 |
May 23, 2006 | High School Musical | Troy Bolton | $5,940 | $5,940 | |
Averages | $48,404,596 | $50,578,264 | $93,719,022 | ||
Totals | 33 | $1,258,519,496 | $1,365,613,119 | $2,624,132,615 |
Leading or Lead Ensemble Roles
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Release Date | Title | Opening Weekend | Maximum Theaters | Domestic Box Office | Worldwide Box Office | Domestic Share |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020-2029 | Three Men and a Baby | |||||
Jun 28, 2024 | A Family Affair | |||||
Mar 7, 2024 | Ricky Stanicky | |||||
Dec 22, 2023 | The Iron Claw | $4,868,370 | 2,774 | $35,611,828 | $42,800,521 | 83.2% |
May 13, 2022 | Firestarter | $3,827,715 | 3,413 | $9,739,250 | $15,030,244 | 64.8% |
Mar 11, 2022 | Gold | 164 | $100,197 | $253,782 | 39.5% | |
May 15, 2020 | Scoob! | $850,000 | 2,500 | $2,188,425 | $26,276,211 | 8.3% |
May 3, 2019 | Extremely Wicked, Shoc… | $9,852,577 | ||||
Mar 29, 2019 | The Beach Bum | $1,763,070 | 1,100 | $3,502,600 | $4,267,808 | 82.1% |
Dec 20, 2017 | The Greatest Showman | $8,805,843 | 3,342 | $174,340,174 | $429,054,204 | 40.6% |
May 25, 2017 | Baywatch | $18,503,871 | 3,647 | $58,060,186 | $175,863,783 | 33.0% |
Jul 8, 2016 | Mike and Dave Need Wed… | $16,628,170 | 3,008 | $46,009,673 | $75,898,100 | 60.6% |
May 20, 2016 | Neighbors 2: Sorority … | $21,760,405 | 3,416 | $55,340,730 | $108,757,621 | 50.9% |
Jan 22, 2016 | Dirty Grandpa | $11,111,875 | 2,912 | $35,593,113 | $105,078,449 | 33.9% |
Aug 28, 2015 | We Are Your Friends | $1,767,308 | 2,333 | $3,591,417 | $10,153,415 | 35.4% |
May 9, 2014 | Neighbors | $49,033,915 | 3,311 | $150,086,800 | $270,944,428 | 55.4% |
Jan 31, 2014 | That Awkward Moment | $8,742,109 | 2,809 | $26,068,955 | $53,068,955 | 49.1% |
Oct 4, 2013 | Parkland | $310,246 | 257 | $641,439 | $1,616,353 | 39.7% |
Oct 5, 2012 | The Paperboy | $102,706 | 76 | $677,200 | $4,027,663 | 16.8% |
Apr 20, 2012 | The Lucky One | $22,518,358 | 3,175 | $60,457,138 | $96,633,833 | 62.6% |
Mar 2, 2012 | Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax | $70,217,070 | 3,769 | $214,151,550 | $351,097,803 | 61.0% |
Dec 9, 2011 | New Year’s Eve | $13,019,180 | 3,505 | $54,544,638 | $146,850,273 | 37.1% |
Jul 30, 2010 | Charlie St. Cloud | $12,381,585 | 2,725 | $31,206,263 | $48,478,084 | 64.4% |
Nov 25, 2009 | Me and Orson Welles | $63,638 | 134 | $1,190,003 | $1,190,003 | 100.0% |
Apr 17, 2009 | 17 Again | $23,722,310 | 3,255 | $64,167,069 | $139,474,906 | 46.0% |
Oct 24, 2008 | High School Musical 3:… | $42,030,184 | 3,626 | $90,559,416 | $274,392,880 | 33.0% |
Averages | $15,810,854 | 2,511 | $50,810,367 | $103,959,213 | 49.9% | |
Totals | 26 | $1,117,828,064 | $2,391,061,896 |
Supporting Roles
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Release Date | Title | Opening Weekend | Maximum Theaters | Domestic Box Office | Worldwide Box Office | Domestic Share |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dec 1, 2017 | The Disaster Artist | $1,211,345 | 1,010 | $21,120,616 | $28,717,667 | 73.5% |
Sep 14, 2012 | Liberal Arts | $27,435 | 32 | $319,176 | $1,143,950 | 27.9% |
Jul 20, 2007 | Hairspray | $27,476,745 | 3,121 | $118,871,849 | $202,822,861 | 58.6% |
Averages | $9,571,842 | 1,388 | $46,770,547 | $77,561,493 | 53.4% | |
Totals | 3 | $140,311,641 | $232,684,478 |
Latest Ranking on All Acting Box Office Record Lists
All Technical Credits
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Release Date | Title | Role | Domestic Box Office | International Box Office | Worldwide Box Office |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jan 31, 2014 | That Awkward Moment | Executive Producer | $26,068,955 | $27,000,000 | $53,068,955 |
Averages | $26,068,955 | $27,000,000 | $53,068,955 | ||
Totals | 1 | $26,068,955 | $27,000,000 | $53,068,955 |
Latest Ranking on All Technical Box Office Record Lists
Record | Rank | Amount |
---|---|---|
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 2,901-3,000) | 3,000 | $26,068,955 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the International Box Office (Rank 2,801-2,900) | 2,817 | $27,000,000 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 2,901-3,000) | 2,975 | $53,068,955 |