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MOVIE

The Club 2015

The Club
2015
 98 minutes (1 hrs 38 mins)
Cast and Director

Directed by

Starring

Alfredo Castro / Roberto Farias / Antonia Zegers / Marcelo Alonso / Jaime Vadell / Alejandro Goic / Alejandro Sieveking / Jose Soza / Francisco Reyes / Diego Munoz
Release dates
US release date US release: 5th February 2016
Germany release date Germany release: 9th February 2015
Chile release date Chile release: 28th May 2015
Box Office Quickview

UK box office

  • Debut box office: 25th Mar '16
  • Debut position: 24
  • Highest position: 24
  • Debut gross: £9.3 Thousand
  • Total chart weeks: 1

US box office

  • Box Office debut: 5th Feb '16
  • Debut position: 63
  • Highest position: 63
  • Debut gross: $6.5 Thousand
  • Total chart weeks: 1
Certificates

18 age rating
US
Not Rated
Total grosses
UK total gross
United Kingdom Flag  £9.3 Thousand
US total gross
United States Flag  $6.5 Thousand
Global total gross
Global Flag  $0
25thframe.co.uk stats
News from around the web

The latest Pirates of the Caribbean film has this week joined the movie Billionaire club, a figure that for many years only Titanic held the honor.

This is now the 7th film to reach the mark, and more impressively the Pirates saga is the first film series to have 2 entries, although a uniqueness that will most likely only least a 12 month, The Dark Knight Rises, out next July, may join The Dark Knight, then, if you count the new Hobbit movies as part of The Lord of the Rings Saga, another Rings movie may join Return of the King.

Currently only one director has 2 film up there, and they happen to be in the top 2 slots, James Cameron's Avatar at the top and Titanic in the runner up spot, but again he could be joined next year by Chris Nolan and Peter Jackson, infact Jackson could be the first director to manage 3 film in the club then the second Hobbit film is released in 2013, only time will tell.

Giving an unfair advantage to this is the 3D tax being paid for these movies, of the 8 billion dollar films 4 were 3D so ticket prices had an unfair advantage, and despite the public decline in 3D it's still enough to give them a boost.

All these billion dollar movies still fall well short of Avatar which not only managed to get over 2 billion dollars but came close to the 3 billion dollar mark.

It's still a fairly elite group with this being only the fifth film to get there, but this week Alice in Wonderland's gross takes it over the Billion mark in world takings.

The first film to get there was Titanic back in 1997 which held the honor as the ONLY film in the club until Lord of the Rinds: The Return of the King managed the feat in 2003.

Since then the flood gates opened when 2006 saw the final Pirates of the Caribbean films go over a billion and then The Dark Night just about managed the feat in 2009.

Then this year Avatar blew the book out of the water and is getting close to $3 Billion in grosses.

Avatar and Alice played the game a little unfair mind when you consider 2 factors, ticket prices are far higher now that they have ever been, and then there is the little extra (and very unfair) surcharge for the 3D and IMAX, studios stop this NOW.