With 400,000 Americans showing up every year at the Indy 500 and 200,000 more buying tickets to see NASCAR’s premiere event The Daytona 500, you would think that the most creative minds in Hollywood would be looking for a way to cash in with more movies about car racing and car culture. NASCAR has an estimated 75 million fans, and it is second only to the National Football League in terms of television ratings, so where are all the good racing movies?

Jordana Brewster is reunited with Vin, Paul and Michelle in FAST & FURIOUS

Universal seems to have answered that question by getting its successful street racing franchise back into the fast lane this weekend with Fast & Furious. The movie, which reunites Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Jordana Brewster and Michelle Rodriguez for the first time since 2001’s original surprise blockbuster, has exploded to a high octane $30.11M or so on Friday and that could mean a $70M opening weekend. That would make it the all-time #1 opening for a car racing movie.

Pixar's beloved CARS will likely have only the second-best opening for an auto racing movie by Monday

ALL-TIME TOP 10 OPENINGS FOR AUTO RACING MOVIES

1. Fast & Furious (2009) – $70M opening (projected)

2. Cars – $60.1M opening

3. 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) – $50.4M opening

4. Talladega Nights – $47M opening

5. The Fast & The Furious (2001) – $40M opening

6. The Fast & The Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) – $24M opening

7. Speed Racer – $18.5M opening

8. Days of Thunder – $15.5M opening

9. Herbie: Fully Loaded – $12.7M opening

10. Death Race – $12.6M opening

How big is that $30.11M opening day? It is the all-time biggest debut gross for any movie not released in the summer peak (May – July) and the November-December holiday period.

ALL-TIME BIGGEST OPENING DAYS FOR NON-PEAK RELEASES

– non-peak is defined as May thru July & November-December –

1. Fast & Furious (2009) – $30.11M opening day (estimated)

2. 300 – $28.1M opening day

3. Passion of the Christ – $26.5M opening day

4. Watchmen – $24.5M opening day

5. Ice Age: The Meltdown – $21.7M opening day

The Fast franchise has an odd history. 2001’s The Fast & The Furious scored a blistering $40M opening weekend and reached $144.5M domestic and over $200M worldwide. Then the enigmatic Diesel decided that he didn’t like the script for the proposed sequel. Boyz n the Hood‘s John Singleton took the reigns from Rob Cohen and Walker returned for 2 Fast 2 Furious, which still scorted an impressive $127M in the US sans Diesel. Then in 2006, Universal rebooted without Diesel or Walker with The Fast & The Furious: Tokyo Drift, and the fan base eroded considerably as the poorly-received movie generated only $62.5M after a sluggish $23.9M 3-day start.

Now, the original cast returns with Tokyo Drift director Justin Lin at the helm, and those Under 25 Males are showing up (dragging their girlfriends no doubt), and the reaction across the social networking platform Twitter is very telling. The first thing I noticed. Lots of sellouts and long lines.

As far as instant reaction from the Twitteratti, it seems roughly split 60% positive and 40% negative. Here are some “thumbs up” Tweets.


Not everyone agrees however. Some are Twittering their disapproval.

For Vin Diesel, this weekend’s opening is an all-time best, and you’ve got to wonder who gives him career advice. He walked away from the both 2 Fast 2 Furious and the sequel to the highly lucrative XXX (XXX:State of the Union was ultimately made with Ice Cube as the lead grossing just $26.8M domestic, but it would have certainly performed much better as a Diesel project).

ALL-TIME TOP 5 VIN DIESEL OPENINGS

1. Fast & Furious (2009) – $70M opening (projected)

2. XXX – $44.5M opening

3. The Fast & The Furious (2001) – $40M

4. The Pacifier – $30.5M opening

5. The Chronicles of Riddick – $24.3M opening

Meanwhile, thanks to the F&F hot wheels, Paul Walker has three $40M+ openings on his resume.

ALL-TIME TOP 5 PAUL WALKER OPENINGS

1. Fast & Furious (2009) – $70M opening (projected)

2. 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) – $50.4M opening

3. The Fast & The Furious (2001) – $40M opening

4. Eight Below – $20.1M opening

5. She’s All That – $16M opening

MVA still a MONSTER at the box office - especially in 3-D

Monsters Vs. Aliens (Dreamworks/Paramount) continues to be a box office juggernaut as it begins its second weekend. The animated send-up of B-movie sci-fi from the 1950’s continues to be fueled by its 2,075 or so standard Digital 3-D engagements and the added 143 Digital IMAX runs scoring an exceedingly strong $8.9M on Friday, which will likely translate to an estimated $35.6M for the frame and a 10-day cume of almost $108M. That will represent an approximate weekend drop of just 40%, which is impressive given that the opening 3-day was $59.3M.

Possibly the creepiest movie poster ever

The Lionsgate genre pic The Haunting in Connecticut sold another $3.67M in tickets on its second Friday, and it should reach about $10.65M by Monday for a new cume of $38.47M. That would mean a drop of only 54%, very good for a horror flick.

Jason Segal unleashes the crazies on passerby on the Venice Boardwalk in I LOVE YOU, MAN

Meanwhile Knowing (Summit) and I Love You, Man (Dreamworks/Paramount) will both spend another week in the top five. The Alex Proyas-directed Nicolas Cage vehicle managed $2.67M to start the 3-day, and Knowing may reach $8.69M by Monday. With a new cume of $58.76M, the gang at Summit has a shot to push this one just past $70M in the US. John Hamburg’s Apatow-style comedy with the inspired pairing of Paul Rudd and Jason Segal is also holding strong with an estimated $2.73M in tickets sold on Friday and a weekend target of $8.69M. I Love You, Man could reach $65M domestic before it wraps its theatrical engagements.

The news is not good for the well-reviewed Miramax release Adventureland. Despite a score of 89% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, Greg Mottola’s much-anticipated follow-up to Superbad has stumbled out of the gates with just $2.17M from 1,862 playdates. The weekend gross will likely be in the $6.05M range for a Per Theatre Average of just $3,249.

EXCLUSIVE STEVE MASON EARLY FRIDAY ESTIMATES

1. NEW – Fast & Furious (Universal) – $30.11M, $8,088 PTA, $28M cume

2. Monsters vs. Aliens (Dreamworks/Paramount) – $8.9M, $2,169 PTA, $81.09M cume

3. The Haunting in Connecticut (Lionsgate) – $3.67M, $1,345 PTA, $31.36M cume

4. I Love You Man (Dreamworks/Paramount) – $2.73M, $1,052 PTA, $44.17M cume

5. Knowing (Summit) – $2.67M, $805 PTA, $52.74M cume

6. NEW – Adventureland (Miramax) – $2.17M, $1,168 PTA, $2.17M cume

7. Duplicity (Universal) – $1.43M, $571 PTA, $29.5M cume

8. Race to Witch Mountain (Disney) – $970,000, $343 PTA, $56M cume

9. 12 Rounds (Fox) – $850,000, $365 PTA, $7.57M cume

10. Sunshine Cleaning (Overture) – $580,000, $1,211 PTA, $4.05M cume

EXCLUSIVE STEVE MASON EARLY 3-DAY ESTIMATES

1. NEW – Fast & Furious (Universal) – $70M, $20,220 PTA, $70M cume

2. Monsters vs. Aliens (Dreamworks/Paramount) – $35.6M, $8,674 PTA, $107.79M cume

3. The Haunting in Connecticut (Lionsgate) – $10.65M, $3,901 PTA, $38.34M cume

4. Knowing (Summit) – $8.69M, $2,616 PTA, $58.76M cume

5. I Love You Man (Dreamworks/Paramount) – $8.69M, $3,342 PTA, $50.12M cume

6. NEW – Adventureland (Miramax) – $6.05M, $3,249 PTA, $6.05M cume

7. Duplicity (Universal) – $4.56M, $1,810 PTA, $32.63M cume

8. Race to Witch Mountain (Disney) – $3.49M, $1,235 PTA, $58.52M cume

9. 12 Rounds (Fox) – $2.7M, $1,158 PTA, $9.42M cume

10. Sunshine Cleaning (Fox) – $2.03M, $4,238 PTA, $5.5M cume

Steve Mason is on Facebook and now also on Twitter@LAMase.