User blog:Ceauntay/Box Office preview: 'Family Guy: The Movie vs. 'The Five Year Engagement'

Four new wide releases enter theaters this weekend — rom-com The Five-Year Engagement, kiddie flick ''The Pirates! Band of Misfits, literary thriller The Raven, and Jason Statham’s Safe — but will any of them be able to take out Family Guy: The Movie, Think Like A Man''? Check out my predictions below:

1. Family Guy: The Movie - $50.3 million

The Seth McFarelane film adaptation grossed a total of $169 million six days after its release in theaters, and will likely to drop at least 50 percent, and was expecting to pass the $200 million mark next weekend.

2. The Five-Year Engagement – $20 million The Jason Segel/Emily Blunt romantic comedy is the latest 2012 release to target women, and if the success of The Vow, The Lucky One, and Think Like A Man are any indication, females should turn out this weekend as well. The Five-Year Engagement, which was produced by Universal for a modest $30 million, has been framed as a companion to Bridesmaids, which opened in May 2011 to $26.2 million before grossing $169 million overall. If the hot pink and white color scheme of the advertisements didn’t make that connection clear, then the fact that every inch of marketing includes the words “FROM THE PRODUCER OF BRIDESMAIDS” should. Oh yeah — it’s also about a wedding.

The Hunger Games: Get the latest news, photos, and more Tracking for the film has been encouraging in the weeks leading to its release, and while it hasn’t garnered quite the same amount of buzz as the ultra-bawdy Bridesmaids did last year, its prospects are pretty rosy. Jason Segel has become a more familiar face thanks to the success of The Muppets and Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and although Emily Blunt is not a proven box office draw, she comes across nicely in advertisements. Sure, The Lucky One will eat up a bit of the film’s core female demographic, but guys should turn up in higher volumes for a straight-up comedy like Engagement, which stars Segel as well as Parks and Recreation‘s Chris Pratt. Playing in 2,936 theaters, the wedding comedy may pick up about $20 million and find legs in the weeks to come. 3. Think Like A Man – $15 million Last weekend’s victor used social media to achieve a strong opening right out of the gate. This weekend, though, the Steve Harvey adaptation may take a hefty tumble. Second weekend drops for similar films like Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married Too? (–62 percent) and Jumping the Broom (–54 percent) tend to be above 50 percent. Thus, Think Like A Man is looking at a sophomore frame of about $15 million — which is what some prognosticators thought it would make last weekend. If the film manages a better than expected hold, it could repeat its reign atop the chart. Either way, it will easily cross $50 million this weekend. 4. The Lucky One – $12 million The Zac Efron ogle-fest will fall a bit quicker than usual due to the added competition of The Five-Year Engagement. Still, a 45 percent dip would give the Nicholas Sparks romance $12 million and a total above $40 million — much more than Zac Efron’s last leading effort, Charlie St. Cloud, which earned just $31.2 million in 2010. 5. ''The Pirates! Band of Misfits'' – $11.5 million Stop-motion animation doesn’t have the broad appeal that CG-animation does in the States, and this Peter Lord-directed title (Lord co-founded Aardman Animation, the studio behind Wallace and Gromit) won’t buck that trend. Still, Sony’s $55 million film isn’t exactly sunk, as Pirates! has already earned $56 million overseas. The lack of another strong family offering bodes well for Pirates! (just as it did for Three Stooges), and it may counteract the fact that American audiences don’t tend to embrace Aardman animation or British humor especially readily (see: Arthur Christmas). Give it an $11.5 million weekend out of 3,358 theaters.