In an unprecedented move, the latest 007 film, Skyfall, came back at the top of the box office after five weeks of its initial release. Yes, films like Avatar and Titanic have claimed the top spot in their fifth week, but those films remained #1 for all those weeks. The Bond film was in second spot for the last three weeks during the first three weeks of The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 which this weekend fell to the third spot. With $11 million in a weak weekend for films, Skyfall has now grossed $261.6 million domestically and 918.2 million worldwide. It might become the first Bond film to reach one billion dollars in worldwide grosses. Not bad for a 50 year old franchise! Moving up one notch Rise of The Guardians claimed the second spot with $10.5 million. The animated film has grossed $61 million in three weeks and is still a long shot before it can recoup its $145 budget, which is very unlikely. Like mentioned before, the last Twilight film came in third place with $9.2 million for a total in four weeks of $268.7 million. The next few weeks will be crucial for the film if it will meet the numbers of Twilight: New Moon or Twilight Eclipse, the two most successful entries in the franchise. But with The Hobbit coming next Friday, the competition will be tough and most likely will have to be resignated to equal or slightly surpass the numbers of its prior entry which topped with $281 million. Lincoln have proved all naysayers wrong, including me, and the Spielberg film has quietly and slowly remained selling tickets for a now total gross of $97.3 million and will easily pass the $100 million mark by Wednesday. The historical biography drama remained in the fourth spot with $9.1 million. The film has not opened overseas yet. Life of Pi also retained it's fifth spot from last week with $8.3 million for a total of $60 million in three weeks. The film will not be able to recoup its $120 million budget and is another box office bomb in Ang Lee's resume. Talking about box office bombs: Playing For Keeps debuted in the sixth place with $6 million. By next weekend when The Hobbit juggernaut unleashes it might be running out of the top ten list.