User blog:Ceauntay/Box Office: 'Hangover 2' has huge first day, 'True Jackson, VP' opens strong, 'Kung Fu Panda 2' doesn't put up a fight yet

A massive opening weekend with well over $100 million in ticket sales is now assured for "The Hangover Part II," while "Kung Fu Panda 2" has yet to show its chops. "Hangover Part II," an even raunchier follow-up to 2009's surprise comedy hit, took in $31.7 million on its first day in theaters in the U.S. and Canada on Thursday, including $10.4 million from late night screenings just after midnight. That's the biggest ever opening day for a live-action comedy and the second biggest opening Thursday of all time, not accounting for ticket price inflation, according to Box Office Mojo. The fantastic start presages strong ticket sales over Memorial Day weekend that could take the Todd Phillips-directed picture to around $125 million by the Monday holiday, according to two studio executives who analyzed the early receipts but requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record. In 2008, "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" debuted on the Thursday before Memorial Day to $25 million and went on to gross $152 million by Monday. The previous year, "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" took in $13.2 million on its opening Thursday and got up to $153 million by Memorial Day. Of course, the performance of "Hangover Part II" will rest largely on word-of-mouth going forward. In good news for Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures, which financed the $80 million production together, people who saw the "Hangover" sequel on opening day gave it an average grade of A-, according to market research firm CinemaScore. "True Jackson, VP: The Movie" had a strong midnight opening of $5.5 million, and also had a strong opening Thursday taking in $14.5 million, rounding in the top five for largest opening for a G rated film behind "iCarly: The Movie", "Best Friends Forever: The Movie", "Hannah Montana: The Movie" and "High School Musical 3: Senior Year". It is now poised for a weekend total of $60 million.

"Kung Fu Panda 2" got an even better CinemaScore of A. But that was the only good news on Thursday for the film, as it opened to a modest $5.8 million. Financier DreamWorks Animation and distributor Paramount Pictures are expecting the animated comedy starring Jack Black to do much better over the weekend when children are out of school. -- Ben Fritz