"Jurassic World" shattered domestic, foreign and global records for a three-day opening weekend, and it did so by finding a sweet spot that Hollywood studios pursue like the Holy Grail.
The 3D dinosaur adventure drew young moviegoers with larger-than life action and older fans of Steven Spielberg's groundbreaking 1993 sci-fi classic, many of whom brought their kids and enabled "Jurassic World" to play like a family film. Thirty-nine percent of the PG-13-rated "Jurassic World" audience was under the age of 25 and 61 percent was over.
A major reason Hollywood produces remakes and sequels to so many 1980-90 movies and TV shows is the potential score with both groups. It happens occasionally, as Warner Bros. did with "Mad Max: Fury Road" this summer and "Godzilla" last summer, but no one has ever done it as well as Universal did with "Jurassic World."
It wasn't an accident that "Jurassic World" devoured the box office like a hungry Indominus Rex. Universal's marketers, guided by president Josh Goldstine and co-president Michael Moses, set out to wring every bit of juice from "Jurassic Park." And they succeeded, taking in a mind-boggling $524 million globally in just one weekend, including a $208 million North American debut.
"The original 'Jurassic Park' was the second coming of 'Jaws' and was for many the film that defined the summer movie experience," Rentrak senior analyst Paul Dergarabedian told TheWrap.
"It was the first film to open to more than $50 million, and was seen and loved by a massive audience that was at once repelled and thrilled by its science-run-amok premise, its homage to the dinosaurs that had thrilled them since grade school, the technological breakthroughs and the quintessential popcorn movie theater experience that the iconic superstar director Steven Spielberg delivered," he said.
He delivered on "Jurassic World," too.