I have a feeling that deep down R&C is going to be the better animated video game movie than Angry Birds, but AB will likely make a lot more money. Video Game movies are a very low bar anyway, so basically having the same characters, writers, voice actors, and general plot are already makes this a solid film by comparison. I mean, we all know what they did to Super Mario back in the day. But I'm not kidding when I say this is TV cartoon writing. The jokes are TV cartoon quality, which frankly is a good thing. No poo poo or farty jokes awkwardly shoehorned in to get that PG rating, yet it doesn't go deeper than it could to compare to bigger budget Pixar/Disney stuff. It's no Zootopia, but it's far superior in writing to a standard Ice Age film. If you love TV cartoons like I do, you'll really like this film. But that's where the devil in the details is.
Now, I'd go and pay the exact same money I'd pay to see a huge blockbuster to see something like Heathcliff the Movie (knowing full well it's just the same TV episodes with weak framing gimmicks). I love seeing cartoon shows I can see on a crappy low rez TV with mono sound on a huge screen with blistering audio. I was there for Powerpuff Girls with bells on, but sadly missed out on Hey Arnold. By comparison, I totally missed out on seeing Attack of the Clones on the big screen and I actually liked the first prequel when I saw it. Personally, I always kicked myself for missing out on Chipmunks Adventure, but I don't think we could even find it. But movie goers aren't like me. While Spongebob, Rugrats, and Wild Thornberries were successful as kid's films (I'm not counting Barnyard or Jimmy Neutron), most of them weren't. Transformers didn't make money in its first animated incarnation, pushing G.I. Joe to a VHS release.
Oh. And I take it back. Civil War already made 200 million before it even hit the US this weekend.