'Twilight' tops US box office, as Bollywood sneaks in

'Twilight' tops US box office, as Bollywood sneaks in
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Summary ‘The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 2,’ topped North America's weekend box office.

 

The final chapter of the blockbuster "Twilight" vampire franchise took the biggest bite out of North America s weekend box office -- while a Bollywood film made a rare showing in the top 10.

 

"The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 2," the fifth and final installment of the wildly popular series based on novels by Stephenie Meyer, took $141.1 million, according to industry tracker Exhibitor Relations.

 

But almost more eye-catching was "Jab Tak Hai Jaan (Till My Last Breath)," a three-hour extravaganza which was the last film made by legendary Indian filmmaker Yash Chopra, the "king of romance," before he died last month.

 

The movie entered the top 10 at number 8, taking $1.3 million at the box office, a rare appearance for a Bollywood film in box office rankings usually dominated by Hollywood productions.

 

The Hindi cinema legend, hailed for directing, producing and screen-writing some of India s most-loved movies over several decades, died last month aged 80 after being admitted to hospital with dengue fever.

 

The box office top spot was, as expected, taken by the last "Twilight" movie. The previous four films, starting with the 2008 series opener "Twilight," earned a colossal $2.4 billion altogether.

 

In second place was the new James Bond movie "Skyfall," last week s top earner, which earned an estimated $41.1 million, according to box office tracker Exhibitor Relations.

 

Third place went to the debut of the Steven Spielberg film "Lincoln," starring Daniel Day Lewis in the role of America s assassinated 16th president, which had $21 million in ticket sales.

 

"Wreck-It Ralph," the animated Disney film about a video game villain with dreams of becoming a hero, earned $18.6 million for fourth place.

 

Fifth went to the movie "Flight," a star vehicle for Denzel Washington, who plays a crash-landing pilot with substance abuse problems. It pulled in $8.8 million.

 

In sixth place was "Argo," based on the true story of six Americans spirited out of Iran during the 1979-80 hostage crisis. The film directed by and starring Ben Affleck earned $4 million.

 

"Taken 2," Liam Neeson s return as ex-CIA agent Bryan Mills, racked up $2.1 million for seventh place.

 

After the Bollywood new entry in eighth spot came "Pitch Perfect," a musical-comedy about a cappella singing group, which earned just under $1.3 million for ninth place.

 

Rounding out the top 10 was "Here Comes the Boom," a comedy starring Kevin James as a high school teacher on a quest to become a mixed martial arts fighter, with $1.2 million in tickets sold.