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Week Weekend End Date Film Total weekend gross (Pound sterling) Weekend openings in the Top 10 Reference(s) 1: 3 January 2010: Avatar [a]: £5,940,479: Did You Hear About the Morgans?
Title Director Cast Genre Release date Notes 4.3.2.1: Noel Clarke & Mark Davis: Emma Roberts, Tamsin Egerton, Ophelia Lovibond: Drama: 2 June: Africa United: Deborah Gardner-Paterson ...
The list is reproduced here ranking the top fifty films released in the UK throughout the twentieth century, defined as covering the period from 1 January 1901 until 31 December 2000. The later films that appear on the BFI list—2001 onwards—are omitted from this chart for the purpose of providing an overview of the century.
This is a list of films which have placed number one at the weekend box office in the United Kingdom.. List of 1985 box office number-one films in the United Kingdom; List of 1986 box office number-one films in the United Kingdom
Seventy-one artists achieved their first top 10 single in 2010, either as a lead or featured artist. Of these, fifteen went on to record another hit single that year: B.o.B, Drake, Ellie Goulding, Emma's Imagination, Example, Florence and the Machine, Iyaz, Justin Bieber, Labrinth, Matt Cardle, Nicki Minaj, Professor Green, Roll Deep, Swedish House Mafia and The Wanted.
The biggest selling single in the 2010s in the UK based on paid-for sales is "Happy" by Pharrell Williams, which has sold over 1,920,000 copies. [1]During the decade, 37 singles released in the 2010s sold over 1 million copies—the highest number to achieve this within the decade of their release.
The Bad Education Movie; Bad Night for the Blues; Bad Santa 2; Bait (2019 film) Balance, Not Symmetry; The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye; The Ballad of Shirley Collins; Ballerina (2016 film) Banaz: A Love Story; The Banksy Job; Basement (2010 film) The Battle for Barking; Battle of the Sexes (2017 film) Beast (2017 film) Beats (2019 British ...
This is a partial list of songs that originated in movies that charted (Top 40) in either the United States or the United Kingdom, though frequently the version that charted is not the one found in the film. Songs are all sourced from, [1] [2] and,. [3] For information concerning music from James Bond films see