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This is a list of films which placed number one at the weekly box office in the United States during 1954 per Variety's weekly National Boxoffice Survey. The results are based on a sample of 20-25 key cities and therefore, any box office amounts quoted may not be the total that the film grossed nationally in the week.
Year Region 1948 United States 1949 United States 1950 United States 1951 United States
October 22 – Charles Skouras, 65, American movie executive and president of Fox West Coast October 22 – George McManus , 70, American cartoonist, Bringing Up Father November 11 – Reinhold Schünzel , 68, German director and actor, The Ice Follies of 1939 , Notorious
The following is a list of films to reach the number-one spot on the box office in the United States: Variety's weekly National Boxoffice Survey leaders List of 1948 box office number-one films in the United States List of 1949 box office number-one films in the United States List of 1950 box office number-one films in the United States List of 1951 box office number-one films in the United ...
This page was last edited on 29 December 2013, at 15:04 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Title Director Cast Genre Notes 3 Ring Circus: Joseph Pevney: Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Joanne Dru: Musical comedy: Paramount: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Richard Fleischer
[1] Six different directors have directed the highest-grossing film on multiple occasions: George Lucas , Steven Spielberg , James Cameron , Sam Raimi , Robert Zemeckis , and Chris Columbus . Spielberg has the record, directing four of the yearly highest-grossing films: Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982), Jurassic ...
Three of the four highest-grossing films, including Avatar at the top, were written and directed by James Cameron.. With a worldwide box-office gross of over $2.9 billion, Avatar is proclaimed to be the "highest-grossing" film, but such claims usually refer to theatrical revenues only and do not take into account home video and television income, which can form a significant portion of a film ...