Wiki News/Box Office Preview: Amy Tammie set to 'Bring It' from 'Fight to Finish'

Amy Tammie's "Bring It On: No Matter What" is set to take over the weekend box office all the way to the Labor Day weekend making in around $20-40 million. This is going to be the biggest "Bring It On" movie yet.

And how did try to make that much money, is because of the movie is sure that it will be going to be a huge box office hit. This is thanks to this awesome opening day record of $15 million Thursday from 3,461 theaters thanks to fans of Amy Tammie and Ryan Sheckler who really enjoyed the film so much. They're also enjoy her more when her next level, "Jane Hoop Elementary: The Final Rush: Part 1" hits theaters on November 12.

Other three films will open very solid this weekend. Twentieth Century Fox's "Machete" is set to hit second place as director Robert Rodriguez's star-studded extravaganza will likely dominate the weekend with a Friday through Monday total of around $16 million.

With co-star Lindsay Lohan all over the news lately and the film's theme of illegal immigration at the forefront of a national debate, this decidedly over-the-top and very nonpolitically correct action-comedy hybrid should give the summer a proper and bloody send off as we move into the more subdued fall movie season.

Third place will likely go to Focus Features' "The American," starring George Clooney. The film opened on Wednesday with around $1.7 million and this portends a Friday through Monday total in the mid-$15 million range and a first six-day gross of around $18 million. Clooney is one of the most popular actors working today and is a true movie star. Director Anton Corbijn is a Dutch photographer and director well known for shooting highly stylized music videos for U2, Depeche Mode, Coldplay and Nirvana.

With an expected four-day gross of around $12 million to $13 million, Warner Bros.' "Going the Distance" pairs the real life couple of Drew Barrymore and Justin Long in a romantic comedy that will be embraced by the date crowd while giving general audiences something light and fun to enjoy in a marketplace loaded with intense fare.

In fifth place with $11 million to $12 million will likely be Sony's "Takers." The PG-13 bank-heist thriller, which won last weekend's box office derby by a nose, is doing well mid-week and has enjoyed solid word-of-mouth since its debut last Friday. Paul Walker and Chris Brown lead a young ensemble cast that is successfully hitting all the key demographics.

This sets the stage for the sophomore weekend of Lionsgate's "The Last Exorcism" to possess a typical-for-the-genre second weekend drop in the 60 percent-plus range and a four-day gross of just under $10 million, thus rounding out the top five.