Tuesday, December 30, 2008

WALL-E Amazon's 2008 bestseller

Wall-E (Three-Disc Special Edition + Digital Copy and BD Live) [Blu-ray]

DEC. 29 | Amazon.com customers bought a lot of copies of WALL-E this year. But they loved comedian Jeff Dunham more.

The world's largest Internet retailer said today that WALL-E, the Walt Disney/Pixar film about a waste-collecting robot, was the e-tailer's best-selling DVD in 2008. The film, which grossed more than $500 million after its June theatrical release, also was Amazon's best-selling DVD during the holiday season, along with The Dark Knight, the company said in a separate report last week.

Still, the DVD most positively reviewed by Amazon customers this year was Jeff Dunham: Spark of Insanity, the 2007 release featuring the Texas-based stand-up comedian and ventriloquist. Almost 90% of the 750 people who reviewed the title on Amazon gave it a five-star rating.

Among videogame items, Nintendo's Wii videogame console was Amazon's best-selling product this year, beating out rival gaming platforms Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3. Wii also dominated Amazon's holiday sales among videogame hardware and software.

Amazon, which doesn't disclose unit sales of its DVDs, generated $7.44 billion in media sales, which include DVDs, CDs and books, for the first nine months of 2008, up 26% from a year earlier, the company said in October. [Source from: videobusiness.com]

Monday, December 29, 2008

"Marley & Me" top dog at busy Christmas box office


People were in the mood for movies over Christmas weekend as multiplexes were jam-packed with customers that powered four different new releases to more than $30M in ticket sales each over the long Thursday-to-Sunday holiday session. The Owen Wilson-Jennifer Aniston dog drama Marley & Me led the way with a huge debut that exceeded expectations. Adam Sandler's new family comedy Bedtime Stories and Brad Pitt's period drama The Curious Case of Benjamin Button generated nearly identical numbers with the former winning the three-day period and the latter grossing more over the four-day span. Tom Cruise also showed some firepower with his war thriller Valkyrie which found a large audience too.

North American ticket buyers had no problems spending ferociously as the Top 20 films hauled in a stunning $200M making for the second biggest weekend of 2008 after only the July 18-20 frame when The Dark Knight scored its record debut. This weekend's explosive box office was even more impressive considering the fact that there were no sequels in the top ten at all. Instead, moviegoers spread their money across numerous star-driven films as everyone found something to their liking.

Soaring ahead of its competitors, Marley & Me scored a powerful top spot debut grossing an estimated $37M over the Friday-to-Sunday period and a sensational $51.7M since its Thursday launch. After several months of disappointments, Fox finally delivered a surefire smash averaging a sturdy $10,632 over three days from 3,480 locations. The studio began 2008 with hits like 27 Dresses, Jumper, and Horton Hears a Who but then stumbled with a handful of films that generated little excitement.

Based on the best-selling book, the PG-rated Marley drew upon a built-in audience but the studio also marketed the film to dog lovers and families to pull in a wide range of business. Thursday saw a stellar $14.7M in sales which set a new record for Christmas Day openers beating the $10.2M of 2001's Ali which translates to about $13M at today's ticket prices. With kids off from school and a large number of adults having no work either, everyday this week will be like a Saturday at the box office so Marley could shatter the $100M mark by next weekend.

Disney's comedy adventure Bedtime Stories, picked by many to be the top dog this weekend, settled into second with an estimated $28.1M in three days and $38.6M over its four-day Thursday-to-Sunday launch. The Adam Sandler family pic averaged an impressive $7,625 during three days and played to a broad audience. Studio data showed that 51% of the turnout was female and 52% was over 25 so all four quadrants were well represented. BedtimeNight at the Museum to a $42.2M four-day Christmas weekend launch two years ago. Reviews were dismal, but moviegoers responded instead to the starpower and effects-driven adventure of the PG-rated entry. basically targeted the same audience that powered Ben Stiller film

Brad Pitt attracted a sizable audience to his Oscar contender The Curious Case of Benjamin Button with an estimated $27M over the weekend and a stellar $39M over the four-day span. Paramount averaged a strong $9,036 from 2,988 theaters over three days with its PG-13 tale of a man who ages in reverse. Directed by David Fincher, Button co-stars Cate Blanchett and runs 2 hours and 47 minutes in length meaning most auditoriums were offering just four shows per day instead of five. Reviews have been very favorable and the film has scored five Golden Globe nominations. Many expect it to be a Best Picture candidate come Oscar night on February 22.

Adult women made up the biggest sector of the audience for Brad. Females were 60% of the crowd while 70% were over 25. Button was not an easy sell for the studio and competition for mature adults was intense so the large opening truly underlines the drawing power of Shiloh's dad. In fact its first day take of $12M marked the second biggest Christmas Day opening in history after Marley. Co-produced by Warner Bros. which will handle the film overseas, Button cost a whopping $150M to produce. But with Golden Globe awards and Academy Award nominations to be announced in January, the epic film should have long legs at the box office and may surpass that figure in domestic coin.

MGM performed a Christmas miracle this weekend. The studio took what was long considered a surefire flop anchored by a star on the decline and turned it around and into a big hit. That film, Tom Cruise's war drama Valkyrie, debuted in fourth place with an estimated $21.5M over the weekend and a terrific $30M since its Thursday launch. Invading 2,711 venues, the thriller about a plot to assassinate Hitler averaged a sturdy $7,942. Valkyrie's debut was in the same vicinity as other Cruise pics like Collateral ($24.7M opening) and The Last Samurai ($24.3M) although those films opened on Fridays during non-holiday frames.

Valkyrie took advantage of a void in the marketplace and seized the opportunity. Emotional dramas like Marley and Button skewed female and Bedtime appealed more to kids leaving adult men with very few films to be excited about. Studio research showed that the PG-13 film pulled in an audience that was 55% male and 66% over 25. Backed by decent reviews, the World War II flick now has a shot at becoming yet another $100M hit for Cruise capping off a major comeback year for Suri's old man who also delivered one of the summer's most memorable performances with his Golden Globe-nominated turn in Tropic Thunder.

Following a less-than-spectacular opening last weekend, Jim Carrey's comedy Yes ManSeven Pounds slipped by 10% as well from its opening frame and grossed an estimated $13.4M pushing its ten-day tally to $39M for Sony. dropped from first to fifth place with an estimated $16.5M. But the Warner Bros. release held up well dipping only 10% putting the ten-day cume at a solid $49.6M. A trip to the $100M club may still result for the A-list funnyman. Will Smith also saw a good hold for his latest venture. The do-gooder drama

Universal's animated film The Tale of Despereaux eased by just 7% and collected an estimated $9.4M for seventh place. The top ten's only G-rated film has taken in $27.9M in ten days and has helped the studio reach a new company high with $1.1 billion in box office in 2008. Keanu Reeves followed with an estimated $7.9M for his sci-fi remake The Day the Earth Stood Still. Down 20%, the Fox release has pulled in $63.6M in 17 days.

Not all new releases clicked with moviegoers this holiday weekend. The one casualty was Lionsgate's stylish actioner The Spirit which bowed to an estimated $6.5M over three days and $10.3M across four days. Playing in 2,509 locations, the PG-13 pic averaged a weak $2,593. Graphic novel king Frank Miller made his solo directing debut after co-helming the 2005 hit Sin City with Robert Rodriguez which opened much stronger with $29.1M over three days.

# Title Dec 26 - 28




Cumulative Distributor










1 Marley & Me $ 37,000,000




$ 51,675,000 Fox
2 Bedtime Stories 28,069,000




38,598,000 Buena Vista
3 The Curious Case of Benjamin Button 27,000,000




39,008,000 Paramount
4 Valkyrie 21,531,000




30,024,000 MGM
5 Yes Man 16,450,000




49,569,000 Warner Bros.
6 Seven Pounds 13,400,000




39,026,000 Sony
7 The Tale of Despereaux 9,368,000




27,945,000 Universal
8 The Day the Earth Stood Still 7,900,000




63,615,000 Fox
9 The Spirit 6,506,000




10,346,000 Lionsgate
10 Doubt 5,675,000




8,825,000 Miramax


Sunday, December 28, 2008

"Valkyrie" challenges fans to rethink Tom Cruise


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It was an improbable plot hatched during World War Two and to match it on movie screens, Hollywood offered perhaps the most unlikely casting of a hero at the holidays -- Tom Cruise playing a German army officer.

Cruise, of course, enjoys All-American looks that helped send him to movie stardom playing heroic young men such as Lt. Pete "Maverick" Mitchell in 1986 movie, "Top Gun." As of late, he's been on a mea culpa tour to explain his odd behavior in recent years and to regain his good-guy image with fans.

The improbable plot was a plan by German officers to kill Adolf Hitler by placing a bomb near him at a top secret meeting, and the resulting movie about that attempt is "Valkyrie," starring Cruise as Colonel Claus Von Stauffenberg who was at the center of the assassination attempt.

"Stauffenberg was unique, handsome, and Tom had a lot of the same attributes, besides the physical looks of the character," "Valkyrie" director Bryan Singer told Reuters.

"I look for similarities in the actor and the person and in that world -- you take all (Tom's) baggage away -- and you've got a good casting choice," he said.

But it didn't always seem that way to Hollywood watchers, and like most movies, "Valkyrie" did not make it from script to screen without some bumps along the way.

Its release, initially set for summer 2008 was moved several times before landing on December 25, leading industry watchers to wonder if problems with the film caused the delay.

The crew had difficulty getting permission to film at historical sites in Germany where Singer and Cruise wanted to shoot, although they eventually prevailed. And the film's big budget was cited by some industry insiders as one reason for the exit of Cruise's long-time business partner Paula Wagner from her job as chief executive of United Artists in August.

Yet, the biggest threat may have always been casting Cruise as a German army officer who fought for Hitler.

When pictures comparing the likeness of a Stauffenberg to Cruise began making their way around the Web in 2007, concerns arose that Cruise's squeaky clean public image would be further tarnished by playing a Nazi.

Cruise already had suffered publicity setbacks with his couch jumping incident on "Oprah" and verbal sparring with Matt Lauer of "Today." In fact, to polish his still tarnished image, Cruise was back on "Today" earlier this month admitting he "came across as arrogant" with Lauer.

But Singer, a self-described history buff, looks differently at the film and at Cruise as von Stauffenberg.

He sees the movie as a thriller, a genre Cruise mastered in the blockbuster "Mission: Impossible" flicks. Singer also views Stauffenberg as a true hero who tried to kill one of the 20th Century's most notorious villains.

"In the context of an assassination thriller ... Tom Cruise was a natural for this character," Singer said.

Audiences apparently agree. With mixed reviews and against stiff competition that included family films "Marley & Me" and "Bedtime Stories," as well as Oscar hopeful "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," "Valkyrie" held its own at box offices. [Source from: reuters.com]

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Adam Sandler answers kids at "Bedtime"

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Earlier this month Adam Sandler, whose new family movie "Bedtime Stories" debuts in U.S. theaters on Christmas Day, agreed to answer some questions posed by kids on Reuters' Fan Fare blog.

Comedian Sandler, 42, is the father of two children and the star of family films such as "Click." He first gained fame on TV sketch comedy show "Saturday Night Live," and has recorded hit comedy music such as his "The Chanukah Song."

We received about 35 comments with questions, and Sandler picked six to answer. They are below.

Q: Posted by Rick: Dear Mr. Sandler - would you please write a song about why kids do not have to eat all vegetables and bad tasting stuff on there plates and put it in a movie? This would help me a lot. Thank you.

A: I hate to break it to you Rick, but I'm a big fan of vegetables. Not eating them, but placing them in my ears. Rock on.

Q: Posted by Isabella: Do you want to go to Dairy Queen and get some strawberry ice cream? Strawberry is my favorite.

A: Thanks a lot Isabella. I'll meet you there at seven. I'll be the guy wearing a sugar cone on my head.

Q: Posted by Derek: Dear Adam Sandler, what's the one (Hanukkah) present you wanted more than anything, but never got? Did you get it when you grew up and got your own money, or did you lose interest?

A: I always wanted Rock-em Sock-em Robots and last year I finally saved up enough to get it.

Q: Posted by Logan: Do you have a porch light?

A: I have two. Do you have a problem with that?

Q: Posted by Jack: Adam, What do you do right before bedtime?

A: Mostly I try to get all the donut crumbs out of my bed.

Q: Posted by Marco: If you were asked to star in one of Christopher Nolan's Batman films, which character would you like to be? Have a good day! And keep up the good work. Come to Texas and do a film here!

A: I would have to be Batman because that's what it says on my Pajamas. [Source from: reuters.com]

In Theaters This Week 25th December

Bedtime Stories
Copyright © 2008 Walt Disney Pictures

An adventure comedy starring Adam Sandler as Skeeter Bronson, a hotel handyman whose life is changed forever when the bedtime stories he tells his niece and nephew start to mysteriously come true. He attempts to take advantage of the phenomenon, incorporating his own aspirations into one outlandish tale after another, but it's the kids' unexpected contributions that turn Skeeter's life upside down.



December 25th, 2008
Adam Shankman
Matt Lopez, Tim Herlihy
Guy Pearce, Russell Brand, Teresa Palmer, Richard Griffiths, Lucy Lawless, Courteney Cox, Adam Sandler, Keri Russell, Aisha Tyler, Jonathan Pryce
Walt Disney Pictures
Adventure, Comedy
disney.com/bedtimestories
PG for some mild rude humor and mild language
1 hour 35 minutes



The Spirit
Copyright © 2008 Lionsgate Pictures

Adapted from the legendary comic strip, THE SPIRIT is a classic action-adventure-romance told by genre-twister FRANK MILLER (creator of 300 and SIN CITY). It is the story of a former rookie cop who returns mysteriously from the dead as the SPIRIT (Gabriel Macht) to fight crime from the shadows of Central City. His arch-enemy, the OCTOPUS (Samuel L. Jackson) has a different mission: he's going to wipe out Spirit's beloved city as he pursues his own version of immortality. The Spirit tracks this cold-hearted killer from Central City's rundown warehouses, to the damp catacombs, to the windswept waterfront ... all the while facing a bevy of beautiful women who either want to seduce, love or kill our masked crusader. Surrounding him at every turn are ELLEN DOLAN (Sarah Paulson), the whip-smart girl-next-door; SILKEN FLOSS (Scarlett Johansson), a punk secretary and frigid vixen; PLASTER OF PARIS (Paz Vega), a murderous French nightclub dancer; LORELEI (Jaime King), a phantom siren; and MORGENSTERN (Stana Katic), a sexy young cop. Then of course, there's SAND SAREF (Eva Mendes), the jewel thief with dangerous curves. She's the love of his life turned bad. Will he save her or will she kill him?
December 25th, 2008
Frank Miller
Frank Miller
Gabriel Macht, Samuel L. Jackson, Scarlett Johansson, Eva Mendes, Sarah Paulson, Paz Vega, Jamie King, Dan Lauria, Stana Katic, Johnny Simmons, Louis Lombardi
Lionsgate
Action, Adventure
lionsgate.com/thespirit
PG-13 for intense sequences of stylized violence and action, some sexual content and brief nudity
1 hour 48 minutes


Valkyrie
Copyright © 2008 United Artist

In a country in the grips of evil, in a police state where every move is being watched, in a world where justice and honor have been subverted, a group of men hidden inside the highest reaches of power decide to take action. Tom Cruise stars in the suspense film, "Valkyrie," based on the true story of Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg (Cruise) and the daring and ingenious plot to eliminate one of the most evil tyrants the world has ever known. Director Bryan Singer ("The Usual Suspects," "X-Men," "Superman Returns") re-teams with Academy Award®-winning "Usual Suspects" screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie to bring to life the story of the men who led the operation to assassinate Hitler. The film also stars an acclaimed cast including Kenneth Branagh, Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson, Carice van Houten, Thomas Kretschmann, Eddie Izzard, Christian Berkel and Terence Stamp.
December 25th, 2008
Bryan Singer
Nathan Alexander, Christopher McQuarrie
Tom Cruise, Kenneth Branagh, Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson, Carice van Houten, Eddie Izzard, Halina Reijn, Kevin McNally, Christian Berkel, Terence Stamp, David Schofield
United Artists
Drama
valkyrie.unitedartists.com
PG-13 for violence and brief strong language
2 hours


Marley & Me
Copyright © 2008 20th Century Fox

An ambitious young reporter, John Grogan, and his wife, Jenny, also a reporter, move to a Florida, buy a house and adopt a Labrador puppy they name Marley. Marley quickly becomes a rollicking force of nature in their lives.




December 25th, 2008
David Frankel
Scott Frank
Jennifer Aniston, Owen Wilson, Alan Arkin, Eric Dane
20th Century Fox
Comedy, Family
marleyandmemovie.com
PG for thematic material, some suggestive content and language
2 hours



The Curious case of Benjamin Bunton
Copyright © 2008 Paramount Pictures

“I was born under unusual circumstances.” And so begins “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” adapted from the 1920s story by F. Scott Fitzgerald about a man who is born in his eighties and ages backwards: a man, like any of us, who is unable to stop time. We follow his story, set in New Orleans from the end of World War I in 1918, into the 21st century, following his journey that is as unusual as any man’s life can be. Directed by David Fincher and starring Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett with Taraji P. Henson, Tilda Swinton, Jason Flemyng, Elias Koteas and Julia Ormond, “Benjamin Button,” is a grand tale of a not-so-ordinary man and the people and places he discovers along the way, the loves he finds, the joys of life and the sadness of death, and what lasts beyond time.
December 25th, 2008
David Fincher
Eric Roth
Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Tilda Swinton, Taraji P. Henson, Jason Flemyng, Elias Koteas, Julia Ormond
Paramount Pictures
Drama, Fantasy
benjaminbutton.com
PG-13 for brief war violence, sexual content, language and smoking
2 hours 47 minutes