1967 Top Box Office Movies

Finding box office information for movies made before 1980 is not an easy task.   For somebody looking for box office information on 1967 it is very very frustrating.  Over the years, we have researched and collected information on over 36,000 movies.  So we figured we would show all the 1967 movies in our database.

To make this list a movie had to be made in 1967.  This page will looks at 122 1967 Top Box Office Movies.  The movies are listed in a massive table that lets you rank the movies from Best to Worst in six different sortable columns of information.    This only represents about 25% of the movies made in 1967….but should cover the top box office movies.

The Graduate, Cool Han Luke, El Dorado and Point Blank are got made in 1967.

Our UMR Top 50 of 1967

1967 Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table

The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies anyway you want.

  • Sort 1967  Movies by movie titles and movie trailers
  • Sort 1967  Movies by the stars or in some cases the director of the movie.
  • Sort 1967  Movies by stars of the movie
  • Sort 1967  Movies by domestic adjusted box office grosses using current movie ticket cost (in millions)
  • Sort 1967  Movies how they were received by critics and audiences.  60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie.
  • Sort by how many Oscar® nominations each 1967  Movies received and how many Oscar® wins each 1967 Movies received.
  • Sort 1967 Movies by Ultimate Movie Ranking Score (UMR).  Our UMR score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
 
Spencer Tracy and Sidney Poitier in 1967’s Guess Whose Coming To Dinner

Top earners in 1967 for Adjusted USA Box Office:

35 thoughts on “1967 Top Box Office Movies

    1. Three Bites of the Apple, made $180,000 domestically, starring Sylva Koscina and David McCallum released in 1967. No data over seas available as of this time.
      hope this helps.

      1. FYI
        This data only comes from the top 20 cities in 1967.
        You can use the 2.5 and multiply it. So around $ 450,000 estimate domestic.
        No overseas data available.
        Hope this helps
        thx.

  1. The “more recent” these yearly charts become, the fewer movies I’ve seen. Although I have seen 37 movies from the list, there are years when I could easily double that amount. What surprised me is the dismal performance of Doris Day in 1967- though I knew The Ballad of Josie was not a success, I always thought the quite funny Caprice was…well, “fair boxiffice” seems already to be stretching it. Berserk was the last “watchable” Crawford movie with the benefit of Ty Hardin, Judy Geeson and personal favorite Diana Dors. Liz Taylor had lost most of her boxoffice cloud, too, yet I liked Reflection in a Golden Eye and The Comedians with the great Lillian Gish. Real favorites of the year are Two for the Road with a different part for Audrey Hepburn, Up the Down Staircase, In the Heat of the Night, To Sir With Love, Wait Until Dark, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, Cool Hand Luke, Barefoot in the Park, Bonnie and Clyde, In Cold Blood, the gripping drama The Incident and that overblown soap opera Valley of the Dolls, although it would have been interesting to see Judy Garland in the part she had to give to Susan Hayward in the end. Although I do love movie musicals, there is no love on my side for those 1967 outings. The Graduate is a movie that needs revisiting, I guess I was too young when I saw it 🙂

    1. Hey Lupino
      1. 37 movies is still more than me.
      2. 1966 was the last Cary Grant movie….and 1967 is the year we say goodbye to Doris Day movies….Joan has a few more years to go.
      3. Although we saw goodbye to Doris….modern stars start taking up the mantle…as Connery, Andrews, Poitier, Caine, Hoffman, Beatty and others start taking center stage.
      4. We agree on lots of stuff….but not with you on Reflection in a Golden Eye or The Comedians….did not enjoy either of those movies.
      5. But I do agree on Cool Hand Luke, Wait Until Dark, In The Heat of the Night and Bonnie and Clyde.
      6. Like you, I need to revisit The Graduate…..pretty sure it is sitting on my DVD rack….just ready to be watched again.
      7. Garland would have been indeed fun to watch in Valley of the Dolls…..that massive hit might have been really good for Garland (in regards to a longer life)….we will sadly never know.
      Good feedback as always.

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