John Green
Best known as a Story Creator based on credits in that role in 3 films, with $392,617,318 worldwide aggregate box office (rank #385) |
Best-known technical roles: The Fault in Our Stars (Story Creator), Paper Towns (Story Creator), Paper Towns (Executive Producer) |
Most productive collaborators: Scott Neustadter, Shailene Woodley, Josh Boone, Michael H. Weber, Nat Wolff |
Born: August 24, 1977 (47 years old) |
Career Summary
Movies | Domestic Box Office | International Box Office | Worldwide Box Office | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
In Technical Roles | Story Creator | 3 | $156,872,654 | $235,744,664 | $392,617,318 |
Executive Producer | 2 | $32,000,304 | $53,450,180 | $85,450,484 |
Latest Ranking on Selected Box Office Record Lists
Record | Rank | Amount |
---|---|---|
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 2,801-2,900) | 2,848 | $32,000,304 |
Top Grossing Story Creator at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 401-500) | 429 | $156,872,654 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the International Box Office (Rank 2,201-2,300) | 2,231 | $53,450,180 |
Top Grossing Story Creator at the International Box Office (Rank 301-400) | 376 | $235,744,664 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 2,401-2,500) | 2,493 | $85,450,484 |
Top Grossing Story Creator at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 301-400) | 385 | $392,617,318 |
See the Acting Credits tab for all Acting Box Office Records and the Technical Credits tab for all Technical Box Office Records.
DVD and Blu-ray Releases for April 28th, 2020
April 29th, 2020
It is a slow week for DVD and Blu-rays with almost no first-run releases to talk about. The Rhythm Section is the biggest first-run release of the week and it bombed hard. As for the best, The Assistant and The Grand Budapest Hotel are the only two contenders for Pick of the Week. That said, I am really looking forward to Elvira: Mistress of the Dark and I won’t have to wait long, because the screener is on its way.
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Featured TV on DVD Review: Looking for Alaska
April 28th, 2020
Looking for Alaska is a TV mini-series based on the book by John Green. The film was originally going to be adapted into a movie, but a troubled production resulted in that plan being scrapped before pivoting to television. Was this a wise move?
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Weekend Predictions: Is Pixels Poised to Top the Weekend Chart?
July 24th, 2015
Pixels leads a group of three wide releases looking to battle for limited box office dollars. It appears to be on track for first place, but with not as much as I anticipated at the beginning of the month. This is partially explained by its reviews which are lower than the 30% to 40% positive range I was anticipating. Paper Towns is earning much better reviews, but still barely above the overall positive level. Finally there's Southpaw, which is earning mixed reviews and its buzz is weak, so it will likely be outside the top five over the weekend. Both Ant-Man and Minions should continue to perform well, with the former having a shot at first place, if Pixels flops. This weekend last year, there were two wide releases that did quite well, Lucy and Hercules. I don't think any of the new releases this week will come close to earning the same as Lucy did, but I think the depth is better this year, so 2015 will still come out ahead in the year-over-year comparison.
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2015 Preview: July
July 1st, 2015
June was a much better month than expected due to two films, Jurassic World and Inside Out. Had those two films merely matched expectations, then 2015 would have likely fallen behind 2014. As for this coming month, there are five weekends in July and each week there is at least one film with the potential to reach $100 million. Most weeks there are two films that at least have a shot at getting to the century mark. The biggest hit of the month will likely be Minions, which has already opened in several international markets and it's ahead of Despicable Me 2 at the same point. That film made more than $300 million and nearly $1 billion worldwide, so any growth would be fantastic. There are also a number of potential $200 million films, led by Ant-man. Ant-man is the latest release in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, a franchise that has averaged $300 million domestically over eleven films and all of the past six films have reached at least $200 million. I'm not saying this one is guaranteed to do the same, but you can't dismiss that possibility. Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation and Pixels have smaller chances to get to $200 million, but you have to at least entertain the possibility. Additionally, last July was a lot weaker than this July looks to be, so 2015 should win in the year-over-year comparison most weeks. Or I might have let the box office success of June cloud my judgment. We will soon find out.
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2014 Preview: August
August 1st, 2014
July was... well... let's just pretend it didn't happen. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes did well, but week after week 2014 fell further behind 2013 in the year-to-date comparison. At the moment, we are roughly $400 million behind last year's pace and while I don't think August will continue the losing streak, there's really no chance August will put a dent in that number. It looks more and more likely that Guardians of the Galaxy will be a hit, especially given its early reviews, but it could be the last $100 million hit till October, if the bad buzz surrounding Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles turns into bad ticket sales. Last August there were two films that reached $100 million, plus two others that came close. This August might match that, while the biggest film this year should top the biggest film from last year. I think the slump 2014 is suffering through will end the first weekend and overall I think it will cut the deficit a little bit. That said, summer 2014 will still end as one of the worst recent summers at the box office.
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Weekend Predictions: Are we Witnessing the Extinction of a Franchise?
June 26th, 2014
There is only one wide release of the week, but it is a potential monster hit. It is also potentially the last in a very profitable franchise. Transformers: Age of Extinction is the fourth film in the Transformers franchise, a franchise that has averaged more than $350 million at the box office. However, they have also averaged well below 50% positive reviews and the poor critical response could finally be taking its toll. It will still crush the competition this weekend, but it likely won't live up to past installments in the franchise. It will also beat last year's new releases and more than double the first place film; however that might not be enough to save 2014. Last year there were five films that pulled in $20 million or more. This year there will be only one. In fact, there will be only four films that pull in $10 million or more.
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Weekend Wrap-Up: Dragons Soar but Jump Higher
June 17th, 2014
How to Train Your Dragon 2 missed lofty expectations and that allowed 22 Jump Street to earn first place. Both films opened well and their respective studios should be happy, while the overall box office rose by 15% compared to last weekend hitting $187 million. Unfortunately, this is still 8% lower than this weekend last year. Had How to Train Your Dragon 2 matched higher expectations, 2014 would have won on the year-over-year comparison. Year-to-date, 2014 has earned $4.64 billion, putting it 3.0% ahead of 2013's pace of $4.50 billion, so this weekend's loss isn't a big deal.
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Weekend Predictions: Can Dragon Get the Jump on the Competition?
June 13th, 2014
This weekend, there are two potential monster hits coming out. How to Train Your Dragon 2 and 22 Jump Street both look to improve upon the box office numbers their respective predecessors managed. Thanks to the sequel effect, they should both start fast. Additionally, both should have better legs than most sequels, thanks to their incredible reviews. The rest of the top five should all earn more than $10 million helping the overall box office. This weekend last year there were only three films to earn more than $10 million. One of them was Man of Steel, which earned more than $116 million by itself. No film this weekend will match that total, but the depth this year is much better. It should be strong enough for 2014 to win in the year-over-year comparison.
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Weekend Wrap-Up: Fanboys Propel Fault to the Top
June 9th, 2014
As expected, The Fault in Our Stars won the box office race this past weekend, while its opening weekend was on the very high end of expectations. (It did so with a surprisingly strong opening Friday, but more on that later.) The other wide release of the week, Edge of Tomorrow, did about as well as expected, which is to say it really struggled compared to its production budget. Overall, the box took in $163 million, which is 2% lower than last weekend. On the other hand, it is 9% higher than the same weekend last year, which is the far more important number. Year-to-date, 2014 has pulled in $4.38 billion, putting it 3.3% ahead of last year's pace of $4.24 billion. This is still a good margin and hopefully it will last.
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Weekend Predictions: Are the New Releases Faulty?
June 5th, 2014
This weekend, there are two wide releases coming out, one of which is the obvious potential monster hit and the other being the obvious counter-programing. On paper, Edge of Tomorrow is the obvious potential monster hit. It is a Sci-fi action film with a production budget that is nearly $200 million. The Fault in Our Stars is the obvious counter-programing. It is about two teen cancer patients who fall in love, which couldn't be farther away from a popcorn flick. However, the buzz really suggests The Fault in Our Stars could win. In fact, it could break the record for biggest opening for a romantic drama. This weekend last year, The Purge won with $34.06 million, while no other film earned more than $20 million. This year, three films might top $30 million and the winner could pull in more than $40 million. I think 2014 will win this weekend in the year-over-year competition.
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2014 Preview: June
June 1st, 2014
It is too soon to tell how May will end, as this story will be published before the weekend estimates came out. (Maleficent had an excellent start on Friday, unlike A Million Ways to Die in the West.) Overall, it was a good month with at least three movies that are on track to hit $200 million, but there was no really big winner for the month. It was nice and balanced. Unfortunately, last May there was a monster hit, Iron Man 3, and 2014 could not compete with that, so it lost ground to 2013. June hopes to turn things around and there are some reasons to be optimistic. All four weeks there is at least one film opening that at least has a shot at $100 million. There are even two films that at least have a shot at $300 million. Transformers: Age of Extinction should win the monthly box office race while How to Train Your Dragon 2 is a long shot to win, but I wouldn't be completely surprised if it did. Additionally, 22 Jump Street, Edge of Tomorrow, The Fault in Our Stars, and Think Like a Man 2 are all contenders for the century club. Not all of them will get to that milestone, but all of them at least have a short. Last June, there were three films that reached $200 million, including Man of Steel, which nearly reached $300 million. It looks like June of 2014 will be about as strong as June of 2013, more or less. If all films reach their potential, it could win the year-over-year comparison. Unless there are some shocking bombs, it shouldn't struggle so much that 2014 loses its lead over 2013 entirely.
2013 - Holiday Gift Guide - Part IV
December 21st, 2013
PANIC! If you haven't finished your Christmas shopping yet, it is officially time to panic. Personally, I got the last of my shopping done on Wednesday, although I don't think the gift will arrive in time for Christmas. For those still looking for a last minute gift, Part IV of our Holiday Gift Guide focuses on books, CDs, and of course anything else I missed the first time around, beginning with...
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All Acting Credits
All Technical Credits
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Release Date | Title | Role | Domestic Box Office | International Box Office | Worldwide Box Office |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
May 2, 2024 | Turtles All the Way Down | Executive Producer | |||
Nov 8, 2019 | Let It Snow | Based on the story collection by | |||
Jul 24, 2015 | Paper Towns | Based on the Novel by Executive Producer |
$32,000,304 | $53,450,180 | $85,450,484 |
Jun 6, 2014 | The Fault in Our Stars | Story Creator | $124,872,350 | $182,294,484 | $307,166,834 |
Averages | $78,436,327 | $117,872,332 | $196,308,659 | ||
Totals | 4 | $156,872,654 | $235,744,664 | $392,617,318 |
Writer Credits
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Release Date | Title | Opening Weekend | Maximum Theaters | Domestic Box Office | Worldwide Box Office | Domestic Share |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nov 8, 2019 | Let It Snow | |||||
Jul 24, 2015 | Paper Towns | $12,650,140 | 3,031 | $32,000,304 | $85,450,484 | 37.4% |
Jun 6, 2014 | The Fault in Our Stars | $48,002,523 | 3,340 | $124,872,350 | $307,166,834 | 40.7% |
Averages | $30,326,332 | 3,186 | $78,436,327 | $196,308,659 | 39.1% | |
Totals | 3 | $156,872,654 | $392,617,318 |
Latest Ranking on All Technical Box Office Record Lists
Record | Rank | Amount |
---|---|---|
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 2,801-2,900) | 2,848 | $32,000,304 |
Top Grossing Story Creator at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 401-500) | 429 | $156,872,654 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the International Box Office (Rank 2,201-2,300) | 2,231 | $53,450,180 |
Top Grossing Story Creator at the International Box Office (Rank 301-400) | 376 | $235,744,664 |
Top Grossing Executive Producer at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 2,401-2,500) | 2,493 | $85,450,484 |
Top Grossing Story Creator at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 301-400) | 385 | $392,617,318 |