After the festive buying season is over and done with and we get into the January sales the video chart usually sees little movement except for the big discounted films making moves up.
Frozen from Disney retains it's hold on the chart and seems at the moment unmovable, it's now 40 weeks after it's debut and has been a mainstay of the top end ever since.
Little more to mention really, the highest new film is right down at number 18, The Guest stars Dan Stevens and is directed by Adam Wingard.
The Guest had a cinema release from 5th September 2014 making number 8 on it's debut with £313,003 and lasted 2 weeks at the box office, it's final UK gross being £832,147.
After 2 weeks at the top Lucy gets knocked down the chart by Sex Tape which makes it's debut in the Uk at number 1.
Starring Cameron Diaz and Jason Segel this Jake Kasdan directed comedy about a couple trying to spice up their sex life by making a movie, which then gets shared to everyone debuts with £1.4 million.
Not a great opening gross especially for the 2 leads, Diaz has enjoyed great success with the Shrek franchise while Segel has seen big grosses with the likes of The Muppets, Gullivers Travels and Knocked Up.
Lucy has been having a great cinema run and after 3 weeks of release has taken a very respectable £10.46 million.
Also new this week is
Before I go to Sleep at 3 - The Hundred Foot Journey at 4 - The Guest at 8
Chart History - One year ago this week Richard Curtis's About Time made it's debut at the top of the box office knocking the One Direction boys to 3rd.
Five years ago District 9 was the debut film for Neill Blomkamp and it debuted at the top knocking The Final Destination into second.
Ten years ago Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks team up agin to debut the Terminal at the top knocking Dodgeball to second place.
Fifteen years ago so a very static box office with South Park Bigger Louder and Uncut staying at the top while the top new film was Go right down at six.
Finally twenty years ago this month Speed and Forest Gump where the big film at the box office while twenty five years ago Dead Poets Society and Young Einstein were the big grossing films of September.