Place yours bets. The Hollywood Stock Exchange announced the 40 films that will trade on its much ballyhooed futures trading market.
As it announced earlier this month, financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald's market will allow users to try to read the box office tea leaves and predict grosses for a slate of films including "Iron Man 2," "Robin Hood," "Shrek Forever After," "Eclipse," and "Sex and the City 2." The list of films starts in April with the premiere of "The Losers" and thus far extends up to the "The Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn Treader"s' December 10 release.
Users buy shares of the upcoming films, which are are priced at 1/1,000,000th of the anticipated gross, and can take long or short positions on a movie's box office receipts.
The lineup is tentpole heavy, so those hoping to speculate on the opening weekend debuts of Lars Von Trier's next opus will have to wait a little longer, but there are a smattering of lower budget releases such as Focus Features' George Clooney drama "The American."
The 24-hour online market is still awaiting approval from the ommodity U.S. Futures Trading Commission before it can officially launch. The exchange currently boasts about 1.7 million users and was acquired by Cantor Fitzgerald in 2001.
The move to allow users to play with real money, has generated a great deal of media attention and some criticism from those such as the "Washington Post"s' Steven Pearlstein who have argued that they are a ripe target for insider trading of information.
Full list below:

With a lack of blue-chip tentpoles, surefire sequels and fanboy fare, the 2010 summer box office is expected to suffer from franchise famine.
There are currently 10 sequels or reboots scheduled to hit screens this summer, roughly the same as previous years.
But without four-quadrant blockbusters like "Transformers 2," "Star Trek," and "Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince," don't look for a repeat of last summer's record-shattering $4.2 billion.
While "Twilight: Eclipse," "Sex and the City 2," "Shrek Forever After" and "Toy Story 3D" may break big, each is heavily weighted toward women and children.
The key demographic being neglected: fanboys, who will have to wait another year while studios gear up for comic-book stars such as Thor and Captain America. (This summer's exception is a big one, however, as Tony Stark returns May 7 in the hotly anticipated "Iron Man 2.")
Also in that vein is Jake Gyllenhaal's "Prince of Persia," based on the hit videogame -- but it's a shot in the dark on film.
"Looking across the summer, there are lots of movies that are hoping to launch something that can sequelize," said Jeff Bock, senior box office analyst with Exhibitor Relations. "These could be big -- but right now there are a lot more question marks."
Also on the horizon: Fox's "The A-Team," which is banking on nostalgia for the old '80s TV series with Mr. T.
The only other big action fantasy is the graphic novel adaptation "Jonah Hex," which has been plagued by negative buzz since reports surfaced about reshoots.
The absence of a bankable wizard or masked vigilante leaves studios and exhibitors pinning their hopes on unknown quantities, such as Christopher Nolan's "Inception" and the Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz action-comedy "Knight and Day."
"Moviegoers always say that original content is one of their number-one top priorities, and they complain that there are too many sequels and franchises," Vincent Bruzesse, president of the motion picture division for the research film OTX, told TheWrap. "Of course, at the end of the day, eight or seven of the top 10 films are always sequels or franchises."
But one company's famine, is another's feast.
Sony and Universal, for example, are betting that the customers in this case are right and that in Hollywood there's still such a thing as an original idea.
Sony points to last summer of an example that audiences still want something fresh. The studio had its biggest summer on record with a series of original movies such as "Julie & Julia," "District 9" and "The Ugly Truth."
In fact, its one big sequel, "Angels & Demons," was something of a disappointment. It took in just $133 million domestically on a $150 million budget, though it did earn its money back by grossing more than $300 million at the worldwide box office.
This summer, the studio is banking on a similar strategy, with three star-heavy newbies: "Salt," a spy thriller starring Angelina Jolie; "Grown Ups," an Adam Sandler and Kevin James comedy; and "Eat, Pray, Love," a romantic comedy with Julia Roberts. Its only franchise release -- if it indeed qualifies as such -- is a reboot of "The Karate Kid" with Jackie Chan and Jaden Smith transplanting the story to China.
"All of our pictures stand outside of just being formulaic," Rory Bruer, president of Sony's Worldwide Distribution, told TheWrap. "They each have their own uniqueness, but we market them in a way that makes audiences get the story. Audiences will know they're fresh, but they have stories and stars like Angelina that people can relate to."
Universal tried a similar strategy last year, but none of its big summer offerings -- "Public Enemies," "Land of the Lost," "Funny People" -- caught fire. This summer they're feeling more bullish, with Russell Crowe as "Robin Hood" and "Get Him to the Greek" with Russell Brand.
Bruzesse says the more original fare is most sucessful when it exploits a familiar premise.
"'Hangover' is such an amazing story, but it's basically a theme that has been seen countless times in movies like 'Bachelor Party' and 'Animal House,'" Bruzesse told TheWrap. "Taking those archetypes and hidden elements that are known and communicating them to moviegoers in a way that makes them pop is a true marketing challenge."
To be sure, some of the movies that seem to be big question marks now will prove to be "The Proposal"- or Hangover"-size breakouts by the time Labor Day rolls around.
But in Hollywood, there's nothing as comforting a hit that's a foregone conclusion.
"I'm not sure anyone wouldn't prefer launching an established franchise to a great original film," said Jeff Hartke, an analyst with Hollywood Stock Exchange. "If Warner Brothers offered another studio the opportunity to release 'Harry Potter,' would they say no?"
Another record smashed by the unstoppable box office force that is "Avatar."
James Cameron's 3D epic has crossed the $100 million mark globally on IMAX, the first film to pass that barrier, a company spokeswoman confirmed to TheWrap.
"We’re not just tweaking our record, we’re shattering it," Greg Foster, chairman of IMAX filmed entertainment, told TheWrap. "There's no stopping us. I just looked at Rentrak and we're going to have another giant weekend."
As it currently stands, "Avatar" has taken in $67.3 million domestically and $34 million in foreign sales to bring its total IMAX gross to $101.3 million.
“This movie hits all of the DNA spots of IMAX and that's why people are gravitating towards theaters," Foster said. "Jim Cameron crafted the movie specifically to take advantage of the IMAX experience."
The previous record holder was "The Polar Express," which grossed $71 million, but as Foster points out that figure was arrived at over four subsequent re-releases. The highest single-year IMAX gross was "The Dark Knight"s' $65 million in 2007.
Foster said that part of the reason the film has been so successful was that both 20th Century Fox, the film's studio, and Cameron heavily touted the experience of seeing the movie on IMAX, going all the way back to their August "Avatar" day when audiences were shown 15 minutes of the yet to be released film in over 100 IMAX 3D theaters around the world.
"There is nobody that didn't know you could see this movie on IMAX," Foster said. "
The news comes at a propitious moment for IMAX. The company has steadily increased the number of blockbusters it has been releasing on its screens. This week the company announced that the heavily anticipated "Iron Man 2" will premiere simultaneously on IMAX and in theatres worldwide.
The company plans to show over 15 feature films on IMAX this year including "Alice in Wonderland" "How to Train Your Dragon," and "Inception." In contrast, last year they showed around 10 Hollywood style blockbusters.
"It's about finding the right type of movies, not just increasing the number of movies that we show," Foster said. "We like fantasies and things that have physical and geographic scope. Nobody wants to see 'My Dinner with Andre' on IMAX."
"Iron Man 2" will be released in Imax theaters simultaneously with the film’s May 7 worldwide debut, Paramount, Marvel and Imax jointly announced on Thursday.
“The success of the first Iron Man movie catapulted the franchise from the comic books to theater screens, and we're excited that the Imax format will offer fans an even more immersive way to experience the sequel,” Tim Connors, Marvel Studios' chief operating officer, said in a statement.
“'Iron Man 2' is a fantastic addition to our growing film slate for 2010, which is filling out faster than any previous year,” Imax CEO Richard L. Gelfond said in a statment. “The rollout of our digital projection system has enabled us to add more films to the slate, and we’re very excited to partner with Marvel and Paramount on this next installment of the incredible Iron Man franchise.”
1. Other Than “Avatar” The Best Thing You’ll See This Week Is …
“Shorewood’s Lip Dub” video, brought to my attention by Movieline. Using the same Hall & Oates song “You Make My Dreams Come True” featured in “500 Days of Summer” Mr Ballew’s Video Production 1 Class came up with this four minutes of total joy. It had 12,500 hits when I saw it. Expect it to be in the millions by the end of the weekend.