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CinemaScore

Market research firm based in Las Vegas

CinemaScore

Market research firm based in Las Vegas

FieldValue
nameCinemaScore
logoCinemascore-logo.svg
logo_size260px
typePrivate
foundation
founderEd Mintz
location_cityLas Vegas, Nevada
location_countryU.S.
industryMarketing research
productsMovies ratings
homepage
Note

CinemaScore is an American market research firm based in Las Vegas. It surveys film audiences to rate their viewing experiences with letter grades, reports the results, and forecasts box office receipts from the data.

Background

Ed Mintz, who majored in math at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and founded dental billing software company Dentametics, with wife Rona attended The Cheap Detective in June 1978. He had read a positive review by a movie critic but disliked the film despite being a fan of Neil Simon, and heard another disappointed attendee wanting to hear the opinions of ordinary people, not critics. Mintz had not worked with polls or the entertainment industry, but decided to use his math and computer skills for a business surveying the opinions of hundreds of film viewers.

A Yom Kippur donation card with tabs inspired the survey cards given to audience members. The company conducts exit polls of audiences who have seen a film in theaters, asking them to rate the film and specifying what drew them to the film. Its results are published in Entertainment Weekly. CinemaScore also conducts surveys to determine audience interest in renting films on video, breaking the demographic down by age and sex and passing along information to video companies such as Fox Video Corporation.

After employees of Mintz's dental company tested the survey cards at theaters, polling began in 1979. CinemaScore at first reported its findings to consumers, including a newspaper column and a radio show. After 20th Century Fox approached the company in 1989, it began selling the data to studios instead. By the mid-1980s AMC Theatres used CinemaScore data when choosing films for its locations. A website was launched by CinemaScore in 1999, after three years' delay in which the president sought sponsorship from magazines and video companies. Brad Peppard was president of CinemaScore Online from 1999 to 2002. The website included a database of nearly 2,000 feature films and the audiences' reactions to them. Prior to the launch, CinemaScore results had been published in Las Vegas Review-Journal and Reno Gazette-Journal. CinemaScore's expansion to the Internet included a weekly email subscription for cinephiles to keep up with reports of audience reactions.

In 1999, CinemaScore was rating approximately 140 films a year, including 98–99% of major studio releases. For each film, employees polled 400–500 moviegoers in three of CinemaScore's 15 sites, which included the cities Las Vegas, Los Angeles, San Diego, Denver, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Dallas, Atlanta, Tampa, Phoenix, and Coral Springs.

In the summer of 2002, CinemaScore reported that the season had the biggest collective grade since 1995. In the summer of 2000, 25 out of 32 films received either an A or B grade. Twenty-six of the summer of 2001's 30 films got similar grades, while 32 of the summer of 2002's 34 films got similar grades, the latter being the highest ratio in a decade.

Since July 2014, CinemaScore reports its results also on Twitter.

Usually, to maintain comparable sample sizes, only films that open in more than 1,500 screens are polled and reported on CinemaScore's website and social media. The distributor of a film that opens in fewer screens can also contract with CinemaScore for a private survey, whose result would be disclosed only to the client. Some of these privately contracted surveys' results have nevertheless been publicly touted, such as the "A+" ratings for films including Courageous and A Question of Faith (both released by faith-based distributor Pure Flix Entertainment).

Rating

A CinemaScore survey card

CinemaScore describes itself as "the industry leader in measuring movie appeal". There are 35 to 45 teams of CinemaScore representatives present in 25 large cities across North America. Each Friday, representatives in five randomly chosen cities give opening-day audiences a small survey card. The card asks for age, gender, a grade for the film ("A", "B", "C", "D" or "F"), whether they would rent or buy the film on DVD or Blu-ray, why they chose the film and whether or not they felt the film lined up with its marketing. CinemaScore typically receives about 400 cards per film; the company estimates a 65% response rate and 6% margin of error.

An overall grade between "A+" and "F" is calculated as the average of the grades given by responders. In this case, grades other than "F" are qualified with a plus (high end), minus (low end) or neither (middle). The ratings are divided by gender and age groups (under 21, 21–34, 35 and up). Studios use the demographic data when marketing films. A studio might hope that a high grade helps the box office of a film with a disappointing opening weekend, or adjust a future film's marketing based on survey results for one with a similar demographic.

CinemaScore pollster Dede Gilmore reported the trend in 1993, "Most movies get easily a B-plus. I think people come wanting the entertainment. They have high expectations. They're more lenient with their grades. But as (moviegoers) do it more and more, they get to be stronger critics". In 1993, films that were graded with an A included Scent of a Woman, A Few Good Men and Falling Down. Films graded with a B included Sommersby and Untamed Heart. A C-grade film for the year was Body of Evidence. As opening-night audiences are presumably more enthusiastic about a film than ordinary patrons, a "C" grade from them is – according to the Los Angeles Times – "bad news, the equivalent of a failing grade". According to Ed Mintz, "A's generally are good, B's generally are shaky, and C's are terrible. D's and F's, they shouldn't have made the movie, or they promoted it funny and the absolute wrong crowd got into it". Horror films consistently score lower; The Conjurings "A−" was the first time a horror film scored better than "B+". CinemaScore's Harold Mintz said that "An F in a horror film is equivalent to a B− in a comedy".

An "A+" typically predicts a successful box office. From 1982 to August 2011, only 52 films (about two a year) received the top grade, including seven Academy Award for Best Picture winners. From 2000 to January 2020, there were 53 movies with "A+". , about 90 films have received "A+".

From 2004 to 2014, those rated "A+" and "A" had multiples of 4.8 and 3.6, respectively, while C-rated films' total revenue was 2.5 times their opening weekend. Ed Mintz cited Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Cruise as the "two stars, it doesn't matter how bad the film is, they can pull (the projections) up". (DiCaprio's Shutter Island had a 3.1 revenue multiple despite a "C+" grade, and Cruise's Vanilla Sky had a 4 multiple with a "D" grade.)

, 22 films have received an "F" grade. Vulture wrote that besides horror,

Vulture cited as examples of such F-graded films Steven Soderbergh's Solaris with George Clooney, Andrew Dominik's Killing Them Softly with Brad Pitt, and Darren Aronofsky's mother! with Jennifer Lawrence.

In an essay for The Hollywood Reporter, Martin Scorsese strongly criticized this type of approach by writing: "The brutal judgmentalism that has made opening-weekend grosses into a bloodthirsty spectator sport seems to have encouraged an even more brutal approach to film reviewing. I'm talking about market research firms like CinemaScore [...]. They have everything to do with the movie business and absolutely nothing to do with either the creation or the intelligent viewing of film. The filmmaker is reduced to a content manufacturer and the viewer to an unadventurous consumer." Ed Mintz rejected being connected to Rotten Tomatoes, and defended CinemaScore methodology of polling select audiences on the opening night, to see if the film meets the expectations of the people who most want to see it. He further defended the accuracy of their data and the correlation to box office results.

CinemaScore's forecasts for box-office receipts based on the surveys are, according to the Los Angeles Times, "surprisingly accurate" as "most of [the company's] picks...are in the ballpark", in 2009 correctly predicting the success of The Hangover and the failure of Land of the Lost. Hollywood executives are divided on CinemaScore's accuracy. Rob Moore, formerly of Paramount Pictures, said Ed Mintz had an "absolute connection with the pulse of moviegoers". Jeff Goldstein of Warner Bros. described CinemaScore as "essential ... for the entertainment industry", and Dan Fellman of Warner said that the studio discontinued its own exit polling because of CinemaScore. Another Hollywood executive said "It's not always right, but it's a pretty good indicator. I rely on it". Another said that competitor PostTrak was "much better...more thorough and in-depth".

CinemaScore also conducted surveys for product placements, Anheuser-Busch, and Las Vegas casinos.

List of "A+" films

, a total of 132 films have received an A+ rating from American audiences polled by CinemaScore.

CountTitleDirectorYear
1last=egoshoppedate=2023-11-03title=Here's ESB's A+ CinemaScore, since some people in the "Denial" post don't think this actually existsurl=https://www.reddit.com/r/saltierthankrayt/comments/17mmw9h/heres_esbs_a_cinemascore_since_some_people_in_the/?rdt=54355access-date=2024-10-17website=r/saltierthankrayt}}Robert Benton1979
2The Black StallionCarroll Ballard
3date=June 13, 1980title=CinemaScoreurl=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=t3RkAAAAIBAJ&sjid=eH4NAAAAIBAJ&pg=2080%2C1743789access-date=2025-01-29work=Calgary Heraldlocation=Calgarypage=D4}}Irvin Kershner1980
4FameAlan Parker
5date=January 30, 1981title=CinemaScoreurl=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=vDkpAAAAIBAJ&sjid=VoMDAAAAIBAJ&pg=1884%2C8022868access-date=March 23, 2025work=Deseret Newslocation=Salt Lake Citypage=2C}}Robert Redford
6The Elephant ManDavid Lynch
7The Jazz SingerRichard Fleischer
8date=August 28, 1981title=CinemaScoreurl=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=0klj8wIChNAC&dat=19810828&printsec=frontpage&hl=enaccess-date=March 23, 2025work=The Spokesman-Reviewlocation=Spokane, Washingtonpage=23}}Steven Spielberg1981
9Superman IIRichard Lester
10This Is ElvisMalcolm Leo
Andrew Solt
11On Golden PondMark Rydell
12E.T. the Extra-TerrestrialSteven Spielberg1982
13GandhiRichard Attenborough
14Rocky IIISylvester Stallone
15Return of the JediRichard Marquand1983
16Star Trek IV: The Voyage HomeLeonard Nimoy1986
17The Princess BrideRob Reiner1987
18Die HardJohn McTiernan1988
19Dead Poets SocietyPeter Weir1989
20Driving Miss DaisyBruce Beresford
21A Dry White SeasonEuzhan Palcy
22Lean on MeJohn G. Avildsen
23Lethal Weapon 2Richard Donner
24When Harry Met Sally...Rob Reiner
25Dances with WolvesKevin Costner1990
26Beauty and the BeastGary Trousdale1991
Kirk Wise
27Terminator 2: Judgment DayJames Cameron
28AladdinJohn Musker1992
Ron Clements
29A Few Good MenRob Reiner
30The FugitiveAndrew Davis1993
31Homeward Bound: The Incredible JourneyDuwayne Dunham
32The Joy Luck ClubWayne Wang
33Schindler's ListSteven Spielberg
34Forrest GumpRobert Zemeckis1994
35Iron WillCharles Haid
36The Lion KingRoger Allers
Rob Minkoff
37Mr. Holland's OpusStephen Herek1995
38Soul FoodGeorge Tillman Jr.1997
39Star Wars (1997 re-release)George Lucas
40TitanicJames Cameron
41MulanBarry Cook1998
Tony Bancroft
42Music of the HeartWes Craven1999
43Toy Story 2John Lasseter
44Finding ForresterGus Van Sant2000
45Remember the TitansBoaz Yakin
46Monsters, Inc.Pete Docter2001
47Antwone FisherDenzel Washington2002
48DrumlineCharles Stone III
49Harry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsChris Columbus
50Finding NemoAndrew Stanton2003
51The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the KingPeter Jackson
52The Passion of the ChristMel Gibson2004
53The IncrediblesBrad Bird
54The Polar ExpressRobert Zemeckis
55RayTaylor Hackford
56DreamerJohn Gatins2005
57Diary of a Mad Black WomanDarren Grant
58Cinderella ManRon Howard
59The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the WardrobeAndrew Adamson
60Akeelah and the BeeDoug Atchison2006
61Why Did I Get Married?Tyler Perry2007
62UpPete Docter2009
63The Blind SideJohn Lee Hancock
64The King's SpeechTom Hooper2010
65TangledNathan Greno
Byron Howard
66Soul SurferSean McNamara2011
67CourageousAlex Kendrick
68Dolphin TaleCharles Martin Smith
69The HelpTate Taylor
70The AvengersJoss Whedon2012
71ArgoBen Affleck
7242Brian Helgeland2013
73Instructions Not IncludedEugenio Derbez
74The Best Man HolidayMalcolm D. Lee
75FrozenChris Buck
Jennifer Lee
76Mandela: Long Walk to FreedomJustin Chadwick
77Lone SurvivorPeter Berg
78America: Imagine the World Without HerDinesh D'Souza2014
John Sullivan
79The Good LiePhilippe Falardeau
80The Imitation GameMorten Tyldum
81SelmaAva DuVernay
82American SniperClint Eastwood
83War RoomAlex Kendrick2015
84Un gallo con muchos huevosGabriel Riva Palacio Alatriste
Rodolfo Riva Palacio Alatriste
85WoodlawnErwin Brothers
86Miracles from HeavenPatricia Riggen2016
87Queen of KatweMira Nair
88Hidden FiguresTheodore Melfi
89Patriots DayPeter Berg
90The Case for ChristJon Gunn2017
91Girls TripMalcolm D. Lee
92A Question of FaithKevan Otto
93WonderStephen Chbosky
94CocoLee Unkrich
95Black PantherRyan Coogler2018
96I Can Only ImagineErwin Brothers
97Love, SimonGreg Berlanti
98Incredibles 2Brad Bird
99The Hate U GiveGeorge Tillman Jr.
100Green BookPeter Farrelly
101Spider-Man: Into the Spider-VerseBob Persichetti
Peter Ramsey
Rodney Rothman
102UnplannedChuck Konzelman2019
Cary Solomon
103Avengers: EndgameAnthony Russo
Joe Russo
104The Peanut Butter FalconTyler Nilson
Michael Schwartz
105OvercomerAlex Kendrick
106HarrietKasi Lemmons
107Ford v FerrariJames Mangold
108Just MercyDestin Daniel Cretton
109Summer of SoulQuestlove2021
110Show Me the FatherRick Altizer
111Spider-Man: No Way HomeJon Watts
112Sing 2Garth Jennings
113American UnderdogErwin Brothers
114Top Gun: MaverickJoseph Kosinski2022
115The Woman KingGina Prince-Bythewood
116TillChinonye Chukwu
117Jesus RevolutionJon Erwin2023
Brent McCorkle
118Sound of FreedomAlejandro Monteverde
119Taylor Swift: The Eras TourSam Wrench
120Renaissance: A Film by BeyoncéBeyoncé
121Ordinary AngelsJon Gunn2024
122Unsung HeroRichard Ramsey
Joel Smallbone
123Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum TrotJoshua Weigel
124The ForgeAlex Kendrick
125Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve StoryIan Bonhôte
Peter Ettedgui
126White BirdMarc Forster
127Bob Trevino Likes ItTracie Laymon2025
128The King of KingsSeong-ho Jang
129Gabby's Dollhouse: The Movie Ryan Crego
130Taylor Swift: The Official Release Party of a ShowgirlTaylor Swift
131Sarah's OilCyrus Nowrasteh
132Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody AffairQuentin Tarantino

, two directors have made the list four times: Jon Erwin (thrice with his brother Andrew—in 2015, 2018, and 2021—and once with Brent McCorkle in 2023), and Alex Kendrick (2011, 2015, 2019, and 2024). Three directors have made the list three times: Steven Spielberg (1981, 1982, 1993), Rob Reiner (1987, 1989, 1992), and Andrew Erwin (2015, 2018, 2021). The following directors have appeared on the list twice: James Cameron (1991, 1997), Robert Zemeckis (1994, 2004), Pete Docter (2001, 2009), Malcolm D. Lee (2013, 2017), Peter Berg (2013, 2016), Brad Bird (2004, 2018), George Tillman Jr. (1997, 2018), and Jon Gunn (2017, 2024).

Between 2011 and 2024, 19 of the 59 films (32%) to receive an A+ Cinemascore were either faith-based or specifically aimed at conservative audiences. In 2023, eight films achieved the top score, six of which targeted right-wing audiences; the other two films were concert fan films from Taylor Swift and Beyoncé.

List of "F" films

, a total of 23 films have received an F rating from American audiences polled by CinemaScore.

No.TitleDirectorYear
1HomeworkJames Beshears1982
2BoleroJohn Derek1984
3Eye of the BeholderStephan Elliott1999
4Dr. T and the WomenRobert Altman2000
5Lost SoulsJanusz Kamiński
6Lucky NumbersNora Ephron
7DarknessJaume Balagueró2002
8Fear Dot ComWilliam Malone
9SolarisSteven Soderbergh
10In the CutJane Campion2003
11Alone in the DarkUwe Boll2005
12Wolf CreekGreg McLean
13BugWilliam Friedkin2006
14The Wicker ManNeil LaBute
15I Know Who Killed MeChris Sivertson2007
16Disaster MovieJason Friedberg
Aaron Seltzer2008
17The BoxRichard Kelly2009
18Silent HouseChris Kentis
Laura Lau2011
19Killing Them SoftlyAndrew Dominik2012
20The Devil InsideWilliam Brent Bell
21Mother!Darren Aronofsky2017
22The GrudgeNicolas Pesce2020
23The TurningFloria Sigismondi

References

References

  1. Lawrence, Christopher. (2016-08-30). "Las Vegan's polling company keeps tabs on Hollywood". [[Las Vegas Review-Journal]].
  2. Wieland, Chris. (March 20, 1993). "In Springs, Everybody's a Critic". [[South Florida Sun-Sentinel]].
  3. Clark, Travis. (January 27, 2020). "The 21 movies that audiences have hated the most in the past 2 decades".
  4. "Brad Peppard Salary Information 2012". ERI Economic Research Institute.
  5. Cling, Carol. (September 16, 1999). "CinemaScore expands to Internet to offer moviegoers current information". [[Stephens Media (newspapers).
  6. Bowles, Scott. (2002-08-01). "Movies make the grade with fans, critics alike". [[Gannett Company]].
  7. [https://twitter.com/CinemaScore CinemaScore's account] on [[Twitter]].
  8. Wilkinson, Alissa. (August 13, 2018). "CinemaScore, Rotten Tomatoes, and movie audience scores, explained". [[Vox (website).
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  10. McClintock, Pamela. (August 19, 2011). "Why CinemaScore Matters for Box Office".
  11. Goldstein, Patrick. (October 13, 2009). "CinemaScore's box-office swami". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  12. Cunningham, Todd. (June 18, 2013). "CinemaScore Gets 'A' From Studios, Especially When It Counters Critics". [[TheWrap]].
  13. Kornelis, Chris. (2024-03-08). "Ed Mintz, Who Gave Movies Their Report Cards, Dies at 83". The Wall Street Journal.
  14. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (2024-02-10). "Ed Mintz Dies: CinemaScore Founder & Pioneer In Moviegoing Polling Was 83".
  15. Geier, Thom. (January 12, 2020). "53 Movies With A+ CinemaScore Since 2000, From 'Remember the Titans' to 'Just Mercy' (Photos)". TheWrap.
  16. Carbone, Gina. (July 10, 2019). "10 Recent Movies With An A+ CinemaScore That Are Worth Checking Out". CinemaBlend.
  17. Busch, Anita. (August 9, 2014). "B Grade For 'Turtles': What CinemaScores Mean And Why Exit Polling Matters".
  18. (November 10, 2021). "20 Movies With Deeply Confusing CinemaScores". Lifehacker.
  19. (January 25, 2020). "All 21 Movies That Flunked CinemaScore With F Grade, From 'Solaris' to 'The Turning' (Photos)". TheWrap.
  20. Schedeen, Jesse. (January 27, 2020). "CinemaScore: 21 Movies Audiences Hated Most".
  21. Stopera, Matt. (January 31, 2020). "There Have Only Been 21 Movies That Have Ever Gotten "F" Ratings From CinemaScore — How Many Have You Seen?". [[BuzzFeed]].
  22. Lincoln, Kevin. (September 20, 2017). "What the 19 Movies to Ever Receive an 'F' CinemaScore Have in Common". [[vulture.com]].
  23. Scorsese, Martin. (October 10, 2017). "Martin Scorsese on Rotten Tomatoes, Box Office Obsession and Why 'Mother!' Was Misjudged (Guest Column)".
  24. Sharf, Zack. (7 May 2018). "CinemaScore Fires Back at Martin Scorsese, Accuses Him of 'Censoring His Fans' from 'Voicing Their Opinions'".
  25. Sandomir, Richard. (2024-03-19). "Ed Mintz, 83, Who Got Audiences to Grade Films". The New York Times.
  26. McClintock, Pamela. (September 18, 2013). "CinemaScore in Retreat as Studios Turn to PostTrak". The Hollywood Reporter.
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  34. Hammond, Pete. (December 3, 2013). "'Mandela's' Long Walk To Oscar Race: With Renewed Heat And A+ CinemaScore Now Was Rushing It To Make Toronto Fest A Misstep? (Video)". [[Deadline Hollywood]].
  35. (July 6, 2014). "Dinesh D'Souza's Doc 'America' Can't Match Box-Office Lightning of His '2016: Obama's America'".
  36. Brueggeman, Tom. (October 5, 2014). "Specialty Box Office: 'The Good Lie,' 'Men, Women & Children' Open Soft". [[IndieWire]].
  37. McClintock, Pamela. (November 28, 2014). "Box Office: Thanksgiving Holiday Moviegoing Plummets". [[The Hollywood Reporter]].
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  39. Cunningham, Todd. (September 5, 2015). "Faith-Based 'War Room' to Halt 'Straight Outta Compton's' Box-Office Run". TheWrap.
  40. CinemaScore. (January 6, 2017). "''Hidden Figures''".
  41. CinemaScore. (January 13, 2017). "''Patriots Day''".
  42. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (April 9, 2017). "'Boss Baby' Crawls Ahead Of 'Beauty' With $26M+; 'Smurfs' Lost in 3rd With $14M".
  43. CinemaScore. (July 21, 2017). "''Girls Trip''".
  44. (October 3, 2017). ""A Question of Faith" - The First Faith-based Feature Film Produced by an African American Female-Led Production Company Receives Rare A+ Cinema Score".
  45. CinemaScore. (November 18, 2017). "''Wonder''".
  46. CinemaScore. (November 23, 2017). "''Coco''".
  47. CinemaScore. (February 16, 2018). "''Black Panther''".
  48. CinemaScore. (March 16, 2018). "''I Can Only Imagine''".
  49. CinemaScore. (March 16, 2018). "''Love, Simon''".
  50. CinemaScore. (June 15, 2018). "''Incredibles 2''".
  51. CinemaScore. (October 19, 2018). "''The Hate U Give''".
  52. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (November 25, 2018). "'Ralph' Breaking The B.O. With $18.5M Weds., Potential Record $95M Five-Day; 'Creed II' Pumping $11.6M Opening Day, $61M Five-Day".
  53. CinemaScore. (December 14, 2018). "''Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse''".
  54. (December 15, 2018). "'Spider-Verse' Catching $36M, 'The Mule' Carrying Near $18M, 'Mortal Engines' Fails To Start With $7M+".
  55. CinemaScore. (April 1, 2019). "''Unplanned''".
  56. McClintock, Pamela. (March 31, 2019). "Weekend Box Office: 'Dumbo' Disappoints With $45M U.S. Debut".
  57. CinemaScore. (April 26, 2019). "''Avengers: Endgame''".
  58. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (August 11, 2019). "'Hobbs' Hauls $25M; 'Scary Stories' Frighten 'Dora'; 'Kitchen' Sinks Melissa McCarthy & Tiffany Haddish To Career B.O. Lows – Saturday AM Update".
  59. CinemaScore. (April 23, 2019). "''Overcomer''".
  60. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (August 24, 2019). "'Angel Has Fallen' Still Ascending Close To 'London' With $20M; Tarantino's 'Hollywood' Beating 'Basterds' – Saturday AM B.O.".
  61. CinemaScore. (November 2, 2019). "''Harriet''".
  62. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (November 1, 2019). "'Terminator: Dark Fate' Loads Up $2.4M On Halloween Night".
  63. CinemaScore. (November 15, 2019). "''Ford v Ferrari''".
  64. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (November 14, 2019). "'Ford v Ferrari' Cruising To $28M+, 'Charlie's Angels' Kicked Out Of Heaven With $10M+ Start". [[Deadline Hollywood]].
  65. CinemaScore. (January 11, 2020). "''Just Mercy''".
  66. McClintock, Pamela. (December 25, 2019). "Box Office: 'Star Wars: Rise of Skywalker' Unwraps Huge $32M on Christmas Day". [[The Hollywood Reporter]].
  67. Goldsmith, Jill. (July 4, 2021). "Questlove's 'Summer of Soul' Sees $650K Three-Day Weekend Opener At Specialty Box Office".
  68. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (September 12, 2021). "'Shang-Chi' Strong Second Weekend With $31M+; 'Malignant' Dying".
  69. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (December 18, 2021). "'Spider-Man: No Way Home' Scores 2nd Best Opening Day Of All Time With $121M, 3-Day Now Between $242M-$247M+ – Saturday Update".
  70. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (December 25, 2021). "''Spider-Man: No Way Home'' U.S. Grows To $405M+ Before Christmas Business Surges Tonight – Saturday AM Update".
  71. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (May 27, 2022). "'Top Gun: Maverick' Roars With Massive $19.3M In Previews, Sets Records For Tom Cruise, Paramount & Memorial Day Weekend – Box Office".
  72. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (September 17, 2022). "''The Woman King'' Notches A+ CinemaScore & Heads For $18M Opening – Saturday Box Office Update".
  73. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (October 30, 2022). "'Black Adam' Flies To $111M+ During Sluggish Halloween Weekend – Sunday Box Office".
  74. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (February 24, 2023). "'Cocaine Bear' Snorts $2M Thursday; 'Jesus Revolution' Blessed With $3M+ In Total Previews – Box Office".
  75. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (October 16, 2023). "No Bad Blood, Just Mad Love: 'Taylor Swift: Eras Tour' Floating To Second Best Opening For October With $92M+ Per AMC – Box Office Update".
  76. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (December 1, 2023). "'Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé' Brightens Up Thursday With $5M Previews; 99% Positive Audience Exits – Box Office".
  77. Fink, Richard. (September 26, 2024). "Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story Will Get a Wide Release in an Oscar Qualifying Run". [[MovieWeb]].
  78. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (October 6, 2024). "No One's Laughing Now: 'Joker Folie à Deux' Falls Down With $39M-$40M Opening: How The Sequel Went Sideways – Sunday Box Office". [[Deadline Hollywood]].
  79. D'Alessandro, Anthony. (October 4, 2025). "''Taylor Swift: Showgirl'' Va-Va-Voom $30M-$32M; ''The Smashing Machine'' $6m+ Dwayne Johnson's Lowest Opening; ''One Battle After Another'' Nears $100m WW – Box Office".
  80. (2024-09-11). "Praise the Lord, and Pass the A+ Cinemascore".
  81. (October 8, 1982). "CinemaScore". [[The Spokesman-Review]].
  82. (December 4, 1992). "Making the Grade with Filmgoers". Orlando Sentinel.
  83. (December 3, 2021). "10 Movies With An F Cinemascore, Ranked According To IMDb". ScreenRant.
  84. (February 24, 1993). "Everyone's a film critic at Coral Springs cinema". The Miami Herald.
  85. CinemaScore. (September 16, 2017). "''Mother!''".
  86. CinemaScore. (January 3, 2020). "''The Grudge''".
  87. CinemaScore. (January 25, 2020). "''The Turning''".
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