-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- pcb007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueInner Layer Precision & Yields
In this issue, we examine the critical nature of building precisions into your inner layers and assessing their pass/fail status as early as possible. Whether it’s using automation to cut down on handling issues, identifying defects earlier, or replacing an old line...
Engineering Economics
The real cost to manufacture a PCB encompasses everything that goes into making the product: the materials and other value-added supplies, machine and personnel costs, and most importantly, your quality. A hard look at real costs seems wholly appropriate.
Alternate Metallization Processes
Traditional electroless copper and electroless copper immersion gold have been primary PCB plating methods for decades. But alternative plating metals and processes have been introduced over the past few years as miniaturization and advanced packaging continue to develop.
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - pcb007 Magazine
I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week—Holiday Movie Edition
December 22, 2023 | Andy Shaughnessy, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 2 minutes
Every year, my friends on social media have a discussion about Christmas movies. It starts with someone asking whether “Die Hard” qualifies as a Christmas movie. Then everyone speculates about which Christmas movies are the best or worst of all time.
Those are all subjective arguments. But which Christmas movies made the most money? I looked at the box office figures, courtesy of IMDB, and I was surprised to see that “Die Hard” was not one of the top five money-makers. (It was ranked 16th.) Neither was “Elf,” which is one of the best Christmas movies ever, in my humble opinion. There’s just no accounting for tastes.
So, without further ado, here are IMDB’s top five highest-grossing Christmas movies of all time.
No. 1
The protagonist in “The Grinch” gave back all the presents he stole, but this movie flew away with a sleigh full of box office cash. This 2018 movie made $526 million worldwide and $271 million domestically, making it the highest-grossing Christmas movie of all time. It is a good movie, too.
No. 2
“Home Alone” was a close second, bringing in $476 million worldwide and $285 million domestically. I still don’t understand how Kevin McCallister was smart enough to booby-trap his entire house and catch two burglars, but he didn’t notice that his whole family was packing for a European vacation. I always root for Joe Pesci.
No. 3
“Home Alone 2: Lost in New York” brought in $358 million worldwide and $173 million domestically, and marked Donald Trump’s first movie role. Once again, Kevin outsmarts the bad guys, but he somehow doesn’t know that streets in Manhattan run east and west, while avenues run north and south. But then there wouldn’t be a movie, right?
No. 4
“How the Grinch Stole Christmas” earned $345 million worldwide and $260 million domestically, and it was the perfect venue for Jim Carrey to showcase his over-the-top acting skills. He’s so good in this role that he basically became the Grinch. If a movie requires overacting, Jim Carrey is your first call.
No. 5
“A Christmas Carol” is an animated version of the Dickens novel, and Scrooge would be pleased with the $325 million it earned worldwide, along with $137 million domestically.
With characters voiced by Jim Carrey and Gary Oldman, this movie was bound to do well. I read news stories about how this movie scared kids half to death. But in the end, it’s all about redemption.
I hope you all have a great holiday! January will be busy, so rest up for the next few weeks.
Suggested Items
It’s Only Common Sense: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles
12/07/2020 | Dan Beaulieu -- Column: It's Only Common SenseAs we do every year on the Wednesday evening before Thanksgiving, my family gathers to watch the old classic “Planes, Trains, and Automobiles,” starring Steve Martin and John Candy. Just like we do every year, we all end up shouting ideas and suggestions at the characters, encouraging better choices. This movie came out in the late ‘80s, and it is stunning to realize today how many things have changed since then. Most notably, there have been changes in terms of technology, services, and travel. Just think if they’d had cellphones. Their lives would have been so much easier.
Mobility Lab Helps Fight Motion Sickness in Self-Driving Cars
07/02/2019 | Eindhoven University of TechnologyAutonomous cars are safer to drive and offer passengers the opportunity to relax, sit back and enjoy while being transported to their destination. There is a drawback, though. Many people experience motion sickness when reading or watching a movie in a moving car.
Elmatica Brings Attention to Product Development
11/29/2018 | ElmaticaPrinted circuit broker Elmatica, recently released a new film about product development, explaining why cooperating with an experienced partner, could be a smart move.
Tim's Takeaways: Design Tools of Tomorrow--A Real 'Marvel'
04/05/2017 | Tim Haag -- Column: Tim's TakeawaysImagine if you could interact with your design as a hologram floating in front of you the way Tony Stark did in the movie "Iron Man." Wouldn’t it be amazing if you could pick a section on your holographic design with your hands and expand it to the point where you could peer into it, spin it around, and manipulate it as you desired? Want to push a trace down to a different layer? Just give it a nudge in the right direction and the holographic display changes it to the next layer. Don’t like the way a certain area fill looks? Then just grab it with your fingers and pull it out and throw it into the virtual garbage can.
Physicists Create Nanoparticle Picture Series
04/06/2016 | Kansas State UniversityThink of it as a microscopic movie: A sequence of X-ray images shows the explosion of superheated nanoparticles. The picture series reveals how the atoms in these particles move, how they form plasma and how the particles change shape.