White Collar goes all Magic Mike on viewers tonight, as "Gloves Off" features Matt Bomer with his shirt off.
Need we say anything else to get at least half the audience to tune in?
In this ramp up to next Tuesday's summer finale, Peter sends Neal undercover as a Wall Street stock trader, where the ex-con discovers a White Collar boxing ring in which traders fight for insider information. As a result, these two colleagues are forced to lace 'em up, as teased here:
White Collar Clip: Come Out Fighting!
Elsewhere, Neal and Peter will make a pact and swear one another to secrecy...
White Collar Clip: Making a Pact
... but it won't take long for Neal to break that pact via a discussion with Sam:
White Collar Clip: Spying on Neal
Tune in at 10/9c tonight for one of the most anticipated White Collar Season 4 episodes to date.
Need we say anything else to get at least half the audience to tune in?
In this ramp up to next Tuesday's summer finale, Peter sends Neal undercover as a Wall Street stock trader, where the ex-con discovers a White Collar boxing ring in which traders fight for insider information. As a result, these two colleagues are forced to lace 'em up, as teased here:
White Collar Clip: Come Out Fighting!
Elsewhere, Neal and Peter will make a pact and swear one another to secrecy...
White Collar Clip: Making a Pact
... but it won't take long for Neal to break that pact via a discussion with Sam:
White Collar Clip: Spying on Neal
Tune in at 10/9c tonight for one of the most anticipated White Collar Season 4 episodes to date.
- 9/11/2012
- by matt@mediavine.com (Matt Richenthal)
- TVfanatic
Wolverine's absence was felt as X-Men: First Class's attendance hit a franchise low in its debut. The Hangover Part II crashed after a wild opening, while Kung Fu Panda 2 didn't save face. X-Men: First Class squeaked by with a passable estimated $56 million on approximately 6,900 screens at 3,641 locations, and it's looking more like the fanboy fantasia it sounded like when first announced than something that will advance the franchise. Sure, the first X-Men movie opened to $54.5 million, but $56 million in 2011 is far less impressive than $54.5 million in 2000. The first X-Men's start was the equivalent of over $79 million adjusted for ticket price inflation. More telling, though, is that First Class marked a sizable step down from X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which made $85.1 million in its opening weekend. Earlier this summer, a Marvel Comics adaptation of a lesser character, Thor, mustered $65.7 million out of the gate (though attendance was about the same...
- 6/5/2011
- by Brandon Gray <mail@boxofficemojo.com>
- Box Office Mojo
Early June has sometimes seen post-Memorial Day lulls, but it has also seen its fair share of break-out hits. Here's a look back: 5 Years Ago - 2005 Like this year, a DreamWorks animated feature led and the new movies were on the soft side, but it was still a busier period than in 2010, thanks not only to Madagascar but feloow holdovers The Longest Yard and Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. Madagascar grossed $28.1 million, Longest Yard $26.1 million and Star Wars $25.1 million. Cinderella Man was the top new release with $18.3 million at 2,812 venues, but it failed to recreate the success of Seabiscuit, which its marketing emulated. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants got off to a decent $9.8 million start, while Lord of Dogtown wiped out with $5.6 million. * Weekend Report: 'Cinderella' Pulls Punch, 'Madagascar' Claims Title 10 Years Ago - 2000 Mission: Impossible II topped the box office in its second weekend,...
- 6/6/2010
- by Brandon Gray <mail@boxofficemojo.com>
- Box Office Mojo
With four new nationwide releases that lacked broad appeal, the weak box office continued, allowing Shrek Forever After to spend a third weekend in the lead. Overall business hit a 13-year low for the first weekend of June, and it was down 28 percent from the same timeframe last year when The Hangover debuted. Though Shrek Forever After has held court atop the weekend box office longer than any previous Shrek, its business still trailed its predecessors by a wide margin, which is what counts because ranking first is more dependent on what else is playing at the moment than a movie's staying power. The presumably final ogre sequel nabbed an estimated $25.3 million, increasing its sum to $183 million in 17 days. Shrek Forever After was down 42 percent, which was a better hold than the 47 percent drops of Shrek 2 and Shrek the Third, but it had a lower-grossing third weekend than any previous Shrek.
- 6/6/2010
- by Brandon Gray <mail@boxofficemojo.com>
- Box Office Mojo
This weekend, Marmaduke bounds onto over 3,700 screens at 3,213 theaters, Killers hits around 3,300 screens at 2,859 theaters, Get Him to the Greek takes the stage on approximately 3,200 screens at 2,696 theaters, and Splice is unleashed on close to 2,600 screens at 2,450 theaters. None of these four nationwide releases have the air of an event, and Shrek Forever After may have enough juice left in it to spend a third weekend at the top spot. Shrek 4's grosses over the past few days have been nearly on par with Shrek the Third, which generated $28 million in its third weekend. The broadest new release, Marmaduke, seems to have the most bankable pedigree, being the latest entry in the popular talking-animal family comedy sub-genre. It's also positioned on the same post-Memorial Day time period that's seen such highly successful releases as Up, Kung Fu Panda, Cars and Finding Nemo. Recent talking-animal hits include the Alvin and the Chipmunks movies,...
- 6/4/2010
- by Brandon Gray <mail@boxofficemojo.com>
- Box Office Mojo
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