Thursday, September 30, 2010

Wall Street Tops Box Office In A Slow Pace of Action

Last weekend Michael Douglas and director Oliver Stone reteamed for the financial crisis drama Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps and scored the best openings of their careers with $19M topping a sluggish box office that saw the top ten fail to break $90M for the fifth consecutive weekend. The PG-13 film marking the return of corporate raider Gordon Gekko (a role that won Douglas the Best Actor Oscar) averaged a decent $5,333 from 3,565 theaters for Fox. Stone's previous best opening was $18.7M for World Trade Center which bowed on a Wednesday in August 2006 while Douglas beat his previous high (in a lead role) of $17.1M for the kidnapping thriller Don't Say A Word which bowed this very weekend in 2001 when it led a box office resurgence just weeks after the 9/11 attacks. Word was also the last number one hit for Douglas.
Co-starring Shia LaBeouf, Carey Mulligan, and Josh Brolin, the Wall Street sequel was met with mixed reviews from film critics who didn't love it as much as the first one which opened in December 1987, just two months after the stock markets crashed. The new Gekko pic marked Fox's first number one opener of 2010, something the studio was waiting some time for. It did, however, top the first five weekends of the year with 2009's Avatar. Wall Street played to an older crowd with 65% of the audience being over 30 while males and females were evenly split. Formidable competition for review-reading adults came from last week's acclaimed champ The Town which held up quite well in its sophomore frame.
Warner Bros. landed in second place with the opening of its 3D adventure film Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole which bowed to $16.1M from a very wide 3,575 theaters. The PG-rated kidpic based on the popular book series averaged $4,507 per location which was not too strong considering the higher ticket prices at the more than 2,400 3D locations including 193 IMAX 3D sites. Reviews were mixed and starpower from the voices of Geoffrey Rush, Helen Mirren, and Sam Neill did little to excite families. Plus, how many owl movies soar at the box office?
The book series did not come with as large of a built-in fan base as other literary properties have had when making the move to the multiplexes. The Ga'Hoole launch amounted to about half of the bows from last fall's book-turned-kidpics Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and Where the Wild Things Are which opened to $30.3M and $32.7M, respectively.
Strong word-of-mouth is helping Ben Affleck's bank robbery thriller The Town become that elusive type of film that all studios want - the durable box office winner with legs. The Warner Bros. hit suffered the smallest decline among all wide releases dipping only 35% to $15.6M in its second weekend for a solid ten-day score of $48.7M. That puts the Boston-set drama not far behind the pace of the studio's Martin Scorsese winner The Departed which dropped 29% in its sophomore outing with a $57M take in ten days. Town lags by just 15% in terms of gross sales. The critically acclaimed film also scored the weekend's best per-theater average among wide releases with $5,409 in its sophomore session edging out Wall Street and others. Affleck and company should easily be able to make off with $90M in the end and may even reach nine-digit territory.
The high school comedy Easy A followed in fourth with $10.6M dropping a respectable 40% in its sophomore frame. With $32.7M in ten days, the Sony release could be headed for $55-60M.
Opening one spot below was another female-driven comedy that mines high school for laughs - You Again. The PG-rated pic starring Kristen Bell, Jamie Lee Curtis, Sigourney Weaver, and Betty White debuted with $8.4M from 2,548 locations for a mild $3,300 average. Despite the starpower, the Buena Vista release was affected by direct competition from Easy A which still pulled in a sizable number of young women. Even the male-driven dramas Wall Street and The Town have been seeing about half of their business come from females. Critics gave You Again unfavorable marks.
The M. Night Shyamalan production Devil fell 46% in its second weekend - not too bad for a horror film - and grossed $6.6M. After ten days, the Universal release has collected $21.9M and should finish with $32-35M.
Falling 51% in its third weekend was Sony's 3D zombie sequel Resident Evil: Afterlife with $5M for the frame and $52.1M total. International markets brought in an additional $24M boosting the overseas cume to an impressive $150.7M for a stellar global tally of $203M and counting. Afterlife is now the top-grossing Resident Evil pic both domestically and worldwide, thanks to higher 3D ticket prices and continued fan interest in the franchise.
# Title Sep 24 - 26


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps $ 19,011,188


1
$ 19,011,188 Fox
2 Legend of the Guardians 16,112,211


1
16,112,211 Warner Bros.
3 The Town 15,605,171


2
48,692,072 Warner Bros.
4 Easy A 10,600,497


2
32,714,215 Sony
5 You Again 8,407,513


1
8,407,513 Buena Vista
6 Devil 6,605,960


2
21,859,425 Universal
7 Resident Evil: Afterlife 4,954,791


3
52,073,588 Sony
8 Alpha and Omega 4,735,271


2
15,164,944 Lionsgate
9 Takers 1,622,302


5
54,885,175 Sony
10 Inception 1,247,006


11
287,053,292 Warner Bros.










11 The Other Guys 992,812


8
116,966,981 Sony
12 The American 896,382


4
34,607,381 Focus
13 Eat Pray Love 704,613


7
79,040,038 Sony
14 Machete 642,832


4
25,733,677 Fox
15 Despicable Me 582,585


12
245,514,665 Universal
16 The Expendables 564,081


7
102,070,047 Lionsgate
17 Catfish 452,580


2
811,280 Universal
18 Nanny McPhee Returns 394,275


6
28,226,225 Universal
19 The Last Exorcism 344,675


5
40,773,301 Lionsgate
20 Get Low 317,164


10
8,317,497 Sony Classics

Friday, September 24, 2010

Wall Street Is Aiming To Cash In Big Bucks This Weekend

This week 3 new fall releases head into the multiplexes on Friday offering a wide variety of moviegoing options. Fox unleashes its financial crisis drama Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, Warner Bros. lets loose its 3D adventure Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole, and Buena Vista chooses to keep titles short with the comedy You Again.
        23 years after its predecessor opened and became a modern classic, Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps arrives with an aggressive release marking the return of Gordon Gekko. Michael Douglas reprises the role that won him an Oscar and Oliver Stone is back at the helm. The R-rated film features Shia LaBeouf as the young hotshot this time with supporting turns by Carey Mulligan, Josh Brolin, Frank Langella and Susan Sarandon. Mature adults of both genders should take interest here and the recent battle Douglas has had with cancer has generated more press and awareness for the film.


Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
Copyright © 2010 20th Century Fox

Emerging from a lengthy prison stint, Gordon Gekko finds himself on the outside of a world he once dominated. Looking to repair his damaged relationship with his daughter, Gekko forms an alliance with her fiance Jacob, and Jacob begins to see him as a father figure. But Jacob learns the hard way that Gekko -- still a master manipulator and player -- is after something very different from redemption.





Legend of Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole
Copyright © 2010 Warner Bros Pictures

Acclaimed filmmaker Zack Snyder makes his animation debut with the fantasy family adventure Guardians of Ga'Hoole, based on the beloved books by Kathryn Lasky. The film follows Soren, a young owl enthralled by his father's epic stories of the Guardians of Ga'Hoole, a mythic band of winged warriors who had fought a great battle to save all of owlkind from the evil Pure Ones. While Soren dreams of someday joining his heroes, his older brother, Kludd, scoffs at the notion, and yearns to hunt, fly and steal his father's favor from his younger sibling. But Kludd's jealousy has terrible consequences--causing both owlets to fall from their treetop home and right into the talons of the Pure Ones. Now it is up to Soren to make a daring escape with the help of other brave young owls. Together they soar across the sea and through the mist to find the Great Tree, home of the legendary Guardians of Ga'Hoole--Soren's only hope of defeating the Pure Ones and saving the owl kingdoms.



You Again
Copyright © 2010 Touchstone Pictures

No matter how old you are, you never get over high school. Successful PR pro Marni (Kristin Bell) heads home for her older brother’s (Jimmy Wolk) wedding and discovers that he’s marrying her high school arch nemesis (ODETTE YUSTMAN), who’s conveniently forgotten all the rotten things she did so many years ago. Then the bride’s jet-setting aunt (SIGOURNEY WEAVER) bursts in and Marni’s not-sojet-setting mom (JAMIE LEE CURTIS) comes face to face with her own high school rival. The claws come out and old wounds are opened in this crazy comedy about what happens when you’re reunited with the one person you’d like to forget.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Blu-ray 21st September Releases

Robin Hood: Unrated Director's Cut (Blu-ray/DVD Combo + Digital Copy)

Universal / 2010 / 156 Minutes / Unrated
Street Date: September 21, 2010 

Overall Grade 4 out of 5 Recommended




Genres: Action, epic drama,

Starring: Russell Crowe and Cate Blanchet
Director: Ridley Scott

Plot Synopsis: Academy Award® winner Russell Crowe and visionary director Ridley Scott (Gladiator) reunite for the untold story of the man behind the legend. In an age of oppression and shameless tyranny, an outlaw becomes the unlikely hero that saves a nation and inspires generations to fight for freedom. In this thrilling action adventure, "Russell Crowe and Ridley Scott are at their most entertaining since Gladiator" (Dan Jolin, Empire (UK). Also starring Academy Award® winner Cate Blanchett.

Disc Features:


  • Digital Copy of Robin Hood Unrated Version (expires 09/30/2011)



  • Deleted Scenes with Introduction and Commentary by Editor Pietro Scalia



  • "Rise and Rise Again": Making Ridley Scott's Robin Hood



  • Director's Notebook: Watch the theatrical version with behind-the-scenes footage, hand-drawn "Ridleygrams" and filmmaker interviews



  • "The Art of Nottingham": A portfolio of designs, including video introductions, galleries of conceptual art, costume designs, storyboards and other imagery




  • Spartacus: Blood and Sand - The Complete First Season [Blu-ray]

    Starz/Anchor Bay / 2010 / 640 Minutes / Unrated
    Street Date: September 21, 2010





    Genres: Action, Drama, Fantasy, TV

    Starring: Andy Whitfield, Lucy Lawless, Manu Bennett, John Hannah, Peter Mensah
    Director: Grady Hall

    Plot Synopsis: “SPARTACUS: BLOOD AND SAND” was inspired by the actual slave of the Roman Republic, who in 73 BC led a slave revolt that grew to more than 120,000 fighters. Torn from his homeland and the woman he loves, Spartacus (Whitfield), a Thracian warrior captured by Romans, is enslaved into a gladiator training school owned by Batiatus (Hannah) and his wife Lucretia (Lawless). He is forced to fight daily for his life against deadly foes, under the brutal whip of trainer Doctore (Mensah). He is condemned to the brutal world of the arena where blood and death are primetime entertainment. But not all battles are fought upon the sands. Treachery, corruption and the allure of sensual pleasures will constantly test him and his masters.
    Against all odds, Spartacus’ rebellious instincts, his intense love for his wife Sura (Erin Cummings) and his powerful fighting skills drive him to win a series of near-impossible battles – setting in motion a revolution against the tyranny of Rome. To survive, he must become more than a man, more than a gladiator. He must become a legend.

    Disc Features:


  • Featurettes: Gladiator Camp, History Rewritten, Make-up Effects, The Hole And more!



  • Audio Commentaries



  • Episodes with Enhanced Digital Effects



  • Behind-The-Scenes Footage



  • Bloopers



  • Trailers



  • Blu-ray Exclusive bonus feature: Four “Directors’ Cut Extended Episodes” personally selected by Executive Producer Rob Tapert


  • Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue (Two-Disc Blu-ray/ DVD Combo)

    Disney/Buena Vista / 2010 / Rated G
    Street Date: September 21, 2010 

    Overall Grade 4 out of 5

     

      

    Genres: Animation, family

    Starring: Michael Sheen, Mae Whitman, Kristin Chenoweth, and Lucy Liu

    Director: Bradley Raymond

    Plot Synopsis: What would you do if you met a fairy? Witness the historic moment when Tinker Bell first meets a human being, and it’s not who you think.

    Years before meeting Wendy and the Lost Boys, Tinker Bell met Lizzy, a little girl with a steadfast belief in the power of pixie dust and the magic land of fairies. During the fairies’ summer visit to the flowering meadows of England, two very different worlds unite for the first time and Tink develops a special bond with a curious child in need of a friend. As her fellow fairies launch a daring rescue, Tinker Bell takes a huge risk, putting her own safety and the future of all fairykind in jeopardy.

    Experience Disney’s astonishing all-new movie about the true power of faith and friendship. Bursting with excitement and imagination, Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue is magical entertainment for the whole family. You might even learn to fly.


    The Experiment [Blu-ray]

    Sony / 2010 / 96 Minutes / Rated R
    Street Date: September 21, 2010








    Genres: Action, thriller

    Starring: Adrien Brody, Cam Gigandet, Forest Whitaker
    Director: Paul Scheuring

    Plot Synopsis: Oscar® winners Adrien Brody (Best Actor, The Piano, 2002) and Forest Whitaker (Best Actor, The Last King of Scotland, 2006) star in this mind-shattering psychological thriller from the creator of TV’s Prison Break. Selected to participate in a two-week research project, a group of men agree to play inmates and guards in a simulation of life within a state prison. But as the 24 volunteers slip deeper into their roles, power corrupts, fears escalate and the experiment spins horribly out of control. Cam Gigandet (Twilight), Clifton Collins Jr. (Crank: High Voltage) and Maggie Grace (TV’s Lost) co-star in this intensely shocking film.

    Disc Features:
    Filmmaker and Cast Commentary
    Deleted Scenes
    Stomp On The Yard: Choreography


    Modern Family: The Complete First Season [Blu-ray]

    20th Century Fox / 2009 / Unrated
    Street Date: September 21, 2010






    Genres: Comedy, family, TV

    Starring: Ed O'Neill and Julie Bowen

    Plot Synopsis: Come join the family for the hilarious and critically acclaimed breakout hit of the year! Featuring an all-star cast led by Ed O’Neill, Sofia Vargara, Julie Bowen, and Ty Burrell, Modern Family takes a refreshing and funny view of what it means to raise a family in this hectic day and age.  Multi-cultural relationships, adoption, and same-sex marriage are just a few of the timely issues faced by the show’s three wildly-diverse broods.  No matter the size or shape, family always comes first in this hilariously “modern” look at life, love, and laughter.


    Human Target: The Complete First Season [Blu-ray]


    Warner Brothers / 2010 / Unrated
    Street Date: September 21, 2010





    Genres: Action, Thriller, TV

    Starring: Mark Valley, Chi McBride, Jackie Earle Haley

    Plot Synopsis: Fox took a chance on a live action series based on a comic book. It worked beautifully. The twelve episodes are well crafted and brilliantly acted. The plots are outrageous, but it is different from anything on currently. Christopher Chance is played by Mark Valley (Boston Legal). Winston, the head of this secret operative group, is brought to life, sizzling life, by Chi McBride (Boston Public). The odd man out, Guerrero, is given such a mysterious allure by Jackie Earle Haley (various film and television roles). These three form a triad which keeps you guessing week from week about their motivations, their past and their apparent commitment to each other. Guerrero seems to be full of surprises.

    Disc Features:
    Two making-of featurettes
    Pilot commentary
    Gag reel




    Stomp the Yard: Homecoming [Blu-ray]



    The Secret of Mooncare [Blu-ray]











    Bored to Death: The Complete First Season [Blu-ray]

    The Secret in Their Eyes [Blu-ray]

    Ondine [Blu-ray]

    American Beauty (Sapphire Series) [Blu-ray]











    The Peacemaker [Blu-ray]

    Charade (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]


    Tuesday, September 21, 2010

    Affleck Robs #1 Spot with The Town

    Last weekend moviegoers listened to film critics as the acclaimed new releases The Town starring Ben Affleck and Easy A with Emma Stone debuted in the top two spots with strong ticket sales by appealing to older men and younger women, respectively. Meanwhile, the new Hollywood offerings with bad reviews - the horror pic Devil and the 3D animated film Alpha and Omega - struggled to find ticket buyers over what was a relatively active weekend for mid-September.
    Warner Bros. scored a well-needed hit with Ben Affleck's bank robbery thriller The Town which powered ahead of expectations to open with $23.8M, according to final studio figures, easily winning a crowded frame. The R-rated crime flick averaged a terrific $8,322 from 2,861 locations and played to an adult audience looking for a quality fall drama. Reviews were exceptionally good with many critics calling it a contender for one of the ten Best Picture Oscar nomination slots. Town also starred Jon Hamm of the red hot Emmy Award-winning series Mad Men, Jeremy Renner of the Academy Award-winning The Hurt Locker, and Blake Lively from the hit teen soap Gossip Girl.
    Affleck, who also directed, hasn't occupied the number one spot in a lead role since February 2003 when his Daredevil scored a strong debut. He followed up that superhero flick with Gigli later in the year which became one of the most panned films of the decade. With a reasonably modest production budget of less than $35M, the Boston-set Town skewed towards older men with 75% of the audience being over 25 and 55% being male. Connecting with that demographic in the fall when NFL and college football are major distractions is not easy. Plenty of cash was spent on marketing with the acclaimed film playing at both the Venice and Toronto film festivals and a major premiere held at Fenway Park in Boston to help generate waves of publicity.
    With the exception of Inception, Warner Bros. had a lousy summer suffering through the likes of the comic book dud Jonah Hex and the subpar performance of the pricey comedy sequel Sex and the City 2. The Town gives the studio what could be a leggy fall performer given the strong reviews and older audience base. The studio's Boston-set crime dramas The Departed and Mystic River - also released in the fall and loved by critics - went on to finish with about five times their opening weekend takes before making additional coin from Oscar re-releases.
    Young women powered the high school comedy Easy A into a strong second place showing with $17.7M. Yet another hit from Sony's Screen Gems unit following Takers and Resident Evil: Afterlife, the PG-13 film about a clean cut high school girl that profits from rumors of her sexual exploits averaged a healthy $6,209 from 2,856 theaters. Critics gave high marks to the Emma Stone vehicle which also starred Amanda Bynes, Stanley Tucci and Patricia Clarkson. With a low production cost of only $8M, Easy A looks to become an easy moneymaker. Studio research showed that 67% of the audience was female and half was under 18.
    A slick marketing campaign exciting teenagers was key to the success. Stone had appeared in supporting roles in Superbad, The House Bunny, and Zombieland but had never anchored a film before. Her stock has certainly climbed. Sony is hoping that strong reviews and good word-of-mouth will help broaden the audience. But a slim 5% uptick on Saturday indicates the usual upfront teen turnout.
    The horror entry Devil, the first of M. Night Shyamalan's three-picture pet project deal with Media Rights Capital, didn't scare up much business opening in third place with only $12.3M. The PG-13 pic about a group of people trapped in an elevator with Satan averaged $4,375 from 2,809 locations for Universal which is distributing worldwide. The studio paid $27M for global rights and will try to reach a domestic gross of the same amount. Devil also opened in seven international territories including the U.K. but collected just $2.3M. The trim 80-minute supernatural thriller was not screened for the press in advance and earned a troubling C+ CinemaScore from paying audiences. It stands as yet another clunker for Universal over these past two years.
    The Night Chronicles project aims to capitalize on the Shyamalan name when selling to audiences, but after a string of creative disappointments from the filmmaker, many thriller fans may have been turned off. Production begins next year on the second film in the series Reincarnate which tells of a jury being haunted by supernatural forces when deciding the fate of an accused murderer.
    Following its top spot debut, Sony's Resident Evil: Afterlife tumbled 63% to $10M in its sophomore round dropping down to fourth place. The fall for the 3D four-quel was nearly identical to the 62% drop suffered by 2004's Resident Evil: Apocalypse which was released on the exact same date six years ago. After ten days, Afterlife has hauled in $43.9M and could be headed for a $60M domestic finish. Overseas, the latest Alice adventure rocketed to $103.2M for a global tally of $147M in ten days on a trajectory towards the $200M mark.
    Faring worst among the frame's quartet of new titles was the 3D wolf toon Alpha and Omega which bowed to $9.1M from 2,625 locations for a weak $3,469 average. The PG-rated film follows a recent string of 3D films to underperform including Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore, Piranha 3D, and Step Up 3D. With so much cash already spent this year on higher-priced tickets for the format, consumers are being extra cautious and picky when it comes to the brands and titles they actually go out and see. This Friday, Warner Bros. tests the waters with Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole while new 3D installments of Jackass and Saw may fare better in October.
    # Title Sep 17 - 19


    Weeks
    Cumulative Distributor










    1 The Town $ 23,808,032


    1
    $ 23,808,032 Warner Bros.
    2 Easy A 17,734,040


    1
    17,734,040 Sony
    3 Devil 12,289,375


    1
    12,289,375 Universal
    4 Resident Evil: Afterlife 10,002,592


    2
    43,893,958 Sony
    5 Alpha and Omega 9,106,906


    1
    9,106,906 Lionsgate
    6 Takers 3,026,285


    4
    52,372,349 Sony
    7 The American 2,672,521


    3
    32,772,475 Focus
    8 The Other Guys 1,972,046


    7
    115,403,440 Sony
    9 Inception 1,967,137


    10
    285,129,855 Warner Bros.
    10 Machete 1,755,550


    3
    24,391,354 Fox










    11 Eat Pray Love 1,614,431


    6
    77,600,235 Sony
    12 The Expendables 1,373,298


    6
    101,020,533 Lionsgate
    13 Going the Distance 1,355,246


    3
    16,771,305 Warner Bros.
    14 The Last Exorcism 1,211,349


    4
    40,113,370 Lionsgate
    15 Nanny McPhee Returns 969,345


    5
    27,617,940 Universal
    16 The Switch 930,037


    5
    26,600,152 Buena Vista/Maple
    17 Despicable Me 910,965


    11
    244,739,015 Universal
    18 Lottery Ticket 625,812


    5
    23,505,360 Warner Bros.
    19 Vampires Suck 568,012


    5
    35,865,445 Fox
    20 Get Low 551,494


    8
    7,785,090 Sony Classics