Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Blu-ray 30th August Releases

Rio (Four-Disc Blu-ray 3D/ Blu-ray/ DVD/ Digital Copy)

20th Century Fox / 2010 / 96 Minutes / Rated G
Street Date: August 30, 2011







Genres: Animation, action adventure, family
Starring: Skandar Keynes, Ben Barnes, Gary Sweet and Terry Norris

Director: 

Plot Synopsis: A classic tale of self-discovery, romance, and adventure, Rio is the story of Blu, a flightless macaw who was taken from the forests of Rio de Janeiro as a young bird and raised by a kind girl in a small Minnesota town. When an ornithologist comes to town and informs Blu's now-grown owner Linda that Blu is the last male of his species, Blu and Linda return to Rio so that Blu can mate with a feisty female named Jewel. Thus begins an adventure in which Blu encounters everything from the complexities of courtship and love, to thugs involved in an exotic animal theft ring, strange new friendships--including one with an overly friendly slobbering bulldog--and a crazy ride through a Carnaval parade. Blu and Linda both mature as a result of their journey in Rio, and love ensures that life will never be quite the same for either ever again. The animation in Rio is quite impressive, the characters are endearing, the Brazilian music is very appealing, and the star-studded voice cast includes Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg, Will i Am, Wanda Sykes, Jane Lynch, George Lopez, and Jamie Foxx. While the story doesn't really offer anything new--instead playing much like a rehashing of some of the major plot points from movies like Madagascar, Finding Nemo, and Babe--that doesn't mean the film isn't perfectly entertaining for both kids and adults.

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader [Blu-ray 3D]

20th Century Fox / 2010 / 113 Minutes / Rated PG13
Street Date: August 30, 2011






Genres: Action, adventure, family
Starring: Skandar Keynes, Ben Barnes, Gary Sweet and Terry Norris

Director: 

Plot Synopsis: The third film based on C.S. Lewis's fantasy books, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader opens three years after the Pevensie children return from battling to restore peace to Narnia in The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian. Edmund (Skandar Keynes) and Lucy (Georgie Henley) are still staying with Eustace (Will Poulter), while Peter and Susan have gotten older and moved on to school and America, respectively. Still as surly and unbelieving as ever, Eustace continues to mock his cousins for their Narnian fantasies. But when water begins spilling into their room from a painting hanging on the wall, all three young people are swept onto the decks of the sailing ship known as the Dawn Treader, which is afloat in the waters of Narnia. This time, there are no wars to be fought in Narnia. But it soon becomes evident that the trio is destined to help King Caspian (Ben Barnes) solve the mystery of the disappearance of the seven lords of Telmar, and prevent the ongoing sacrifices of large groups of Narnian people to the evil green mist. So begins a quest through uncharted waters that will require each of the children to resist temptations like beauty and power, and to conquer the darkness within themselves in order to defeat the threat to Narnia's people. The battle promises to yield unexpected heroes, and through their journey, Edmund, Lucy, Eustace, and even King Caspian and Reepicheep (voiced by Simon Pegg) each grow and mature. Eventually, Aslan (voiced by Liam Neeson) will ask each adventurer to make an important choice that will forever influence his or her future. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader features plenty of high adventure, sword-fighting action, and personal peril, and while it fails to fully capitalize on the characters' motivations or to earn viewers' full emotional investment, it is still a solid addition to the Narnia film series.

Other releases/ Back catalog releases:











The Help Still Strong On 2nd Week. Hurricane Hurting Box Office Sales August 26 - 28.




          Last weekend, the box office slumped to its second lowest point of the year thanks to the lack of a breakout new hit plus a devastating hurricane wiping out plenty of business on the east coast. With tens of millions of people forced to stay home and many theaters shutting down for a day or two, moviegoing took a major hit across a large part of the country. But with films trying to pick up Saturday's lost business on Sunday, and the weather event hitting at a time when the marketplace is generally weak anyway, the overall impact was not incredibly severe.
          Topping the chart for a second straight weekend was the sleeper hit The Help which slipped only 27% to $14.5M, according to final studio figures. After 19 days of release, the Disney release has collected a sturdy $96.8M and will break through the $100M mark this week. The Viola Davis starrer averaged $5,233 which was impressive for the third weekend of a non-tentpole film.
          The weak marketplace saw consumers spend just $87.7M on the Top 20 films. Only the Super Bowl frame in early February was worse this year with $82M. Box office prospects over the next couple of weeks also look grim with few films hitting theaters that are truly exciting ticket buyers.
          The revenge thriller Colombiana led the new releases with an opening weekend score of $10.4M. The Sony release about an assassin hunting down her parents' killers averaged $3,982 from 2,614 locations which was respectable for a late summer film with a hurricane eating into east coast business. Starring Zoe Saldana and produced by Luc Besson, Columbiana did not fare too well with critics, but did connect moderately well with adult women. Studio research showed that 57% of the audience for the PG-13 pic was female and 65% was 25 or older.
          Fox's sci-fi prequel Rise of the Planet of the Apes ranked third with $8.9M, down 45% in its fourth frame. The action hit now stands at $148.7M on its way to $170M+.
          The horror film Don't Be Afraid of the Dark attracted a soft debut in fourth with $8.5M. Averaging a lackluster $3,089 per site from 2,760 theaters, the R-rated remake suffered from stiff competition being the third fright film in as many weeks to hit the multiplexes. FilmDistrict marketed the thriller as being from producer Guillermo del Toro who has a fan following of his own, but overall interest was not too strong.
          The Paul Rudd comedy Our Idiot Brother debuted poorly in fifth place with $7M from 2,555 locations for a wimpy $2,744 average. The summer's latest R-rated comedy earned decent reviews for The Weinstein Co. (which acquired the hot pic at this year's Sundance Film Festival) but lacked the must-see buzz that so many other raunchy comedies earlier this summer had. Often times films work at more specialized events like Sundance or Comic Con, but fail to make much of a mark during a commercial release across 50 states.
           A pair of 3D kidpics followed. In its second weekend, Spy Kids: All the Time in the World fell 48% to $6M for The Weinstein Co. With $22M in ten days, the PG-rated fourquel should finish with around $35M making it the lowest-grossing installment by far. Faring much better with families, The Smurfs slipped only 39% to $4.8M giving Sony a hefty $125.9M to date. The Smurfette pic has been the dominant choice for kids in the second half of summer.
           The 3D remake Conan the Barbarian collapsed by 68% in its second weekend to $3.2M for a weak $16.7M sum in ten days. The big-budget actioner looks to end its weak run with only $20-23M. Fellow sophomore 80s redo Fright Night also fell sharply tumbling 60% to $3.1M for a dull $14.3M total. Look for the 3D Disney release to finish up with only $20M. Rounding out the top ten was the hit divorce comedy Crazy, Stupid, Love with $3.1M, off 35%, for a $69.7M cume. The Warner Bros. film may reach $80M.
           The top ten films grossed $69.5M which was down 20% from last year when Takers opened with $20.5M; and down 34% from 2009 when The Final Destination debuted on top with $27.4M.

# Title Aug 26 - 28


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 The Help $ 14,536,118


3
$ 96,833,423 Disney
2 Colombiana 10,408,176


1
10,408,176 Sony
3 Rise of the Planet of the Apes 8,867,741


4
148,674,018 Fox
4 Don't Be Afraid of the Dark 8,525,728


1
8,525,728 FilmDistrict
5 Our Idiot Brother 7,011,631


1
7,011,631 Weinstein Co.
6 Spy Kids: All the Time in the World 6,007,180


2
21,990,229 Weinstein Co.
7 The Smurfs 4,754,766


5
125,948,234 Sony
8 Conan the Barbarian 3,185,094


2
16,660,669 Lionsgate
9 Crazy, Stupid, Love 3,108,178


5
69,732,502 Warner Bros.
10 Fright Night 3,103,227


2
14,281,778 Disney










11 30 Minutes or Less 2,687,165


3
31,789,438 Sony
12 Harry Potter / Deathy Hallows Part 2 2,564,370


7
370,805,062 Warner Bros.
13 Final Destination 5 2,555,039


3
37,914,984 Warner Bros.
14 One Day 2,516,061


2
9,789,523 Focus
15 Cowboys & Aliens 2,377,475


5
93,523,950 Universal
16 Captain America 2,248,438


6
168,770,306 Paramount
17 The Change-Up 1,202,440


4
34,495,575 Universal
18 Midnight in Paris 743,594


15
51,643,081 Sony Classics
19 Transformers: Dark of the Moon 640,253


9
349,457,208 Paramount
20 Horrible Bosses 639,246


8
113,815,151 Warner Bros.

Blu-ray 23rd August Releases

Blitz [Blu-ray]

Millennium Media / 2011 / 97 Minutes / Rated R
Street Date: August 23, 2011








Genres: Action, Thriller

Starring: Jason Statham, Paddy Considine, Aiden Gillen
Director: Elliott Lester

Plot Synopsis: Tough, uncompromising and totally un-PC cop Brant (Jason Statham) joins forces with Officer DC Porter Nash (Paddy Considine) to hunt down a serial killer (Aiden Gillen) who has been targeting police officers. This fast-paced action-thriller is a raw, gritty tale of moral ambiguity, outsiders and the sacrifices the police make to keep crime off the streets.

Henry's Crime [Blu-ray]

20th Century Fox / 2010 / 108 Minutes / Rated R
Street Date: August 23, 2011








Genres: Thriller, mystery

Starring: Keanu Reeves, James Caan, Judy Greer

Director: 

Plot Synopsis: Sleepwalking his way through life, Henry gets an unexpected wakeup call when he becomes an unwitting participant in a bank heist. Rather than give up the names of the real culprits, he takes the fall and discovers his true calling. Having done the time, Henry reasons he may as well do the crime. Discovering a forgotten tunnel connecting the bank to a nearby theater, he recruits his old cellmate Max to aid in the robbery, all the while playing the lead in the theatre's current production where he finds himself falling for his leading lady, Julie.


The Beaver [Blu-ray]

Summit Entertainment / 2011 / 91 Minutes / Rated PG-13









Genres: Drama, comedy

Starring: Mel Gibson, Jodie Foster, Jennifer Lawrence
Director: Jodie Foster

Plot Synopsis: Walter, once a successful and happy family man, has hit rock bottom. But, in his darkest hour, he finds a rather unusual savior: a beaver hand-puppet that takes over Walter's life in an attempt to change things for the better.

Academy Award® winner Jodie Foster directs and co-stars with Academy Award® winner Mel Gibson in a film critics call bold, complex, and funny.

Other releases/ Back catalog releases:





Sunday, August 28, 2011

The Help Stole Box Office Crown From The Apes for August 19 - 22 Box Office




          Lasr weekend, the sleeper hit The Help ruled the North American box office in its second weekend climbing into the number one spot beating out four new releases which all stumbled in their debuts. The book-based drama grossed $20M, according to final studio figures, slipping a mere 23% in its sophomore session setting up what will be a long-lasting run into blockbuster territory. The Disney release averaged a stellar $7,442 from only 2,690 theaters and raised its 12-day cume to a solid $71.3M. Help should have no problem making its way to $130M and could even soar much higher beating out many of this summer's big-budget action offerings. Great reviews and strong word-of-mouth have made it into an event film for adults and appeal has been expanding beyond older females with more demographics discovering the story.
          After two weekends on top, Fox's Rise of the Planet of the Apes dropped down to second place with $16.1M. Off 42%, the sci-fi pic upped its total to $133.6M.
          Leading the four-pack of new wide releases was the only kid-friendly one, Spy Kids: All the Time in the World, which generated $11.6M from 3,295 theaters for a $3,534 average. Presented in 4D - a 3D film with scratch-n-sniff cards that give off story-related aromas - the PG-rated film played to a family audience but was met with dismal reviews which turned many parents off. Plus the core fan base for the first three films which were released from 2001 to 2003 has grown too old to care anymore so targeting a new generation proved too difficult for the Robert Rodriguez pic.
          Another new 3D film not exciting moviegoers was Conan the Barbarian which debuted in fourth with $10M from 3,015 locations for a not-so-muscular $3,324 average. The R-rated remake was the summer's 13th action film and audiences did not feel that the expensive production was worth the money in the late days of summer. 3D screens did account for a good 61% of the gross for the Lionsgate release though.
          Sony's The Smurfs grossed $7.8M, down 43%, boosting the hit film's cume to $117.5M.
Another piece of 80s nostalgia followed as the horror remake Fright Night did little to attract fans of scary movies opening to $7.7M. The Disney release invaded an aggressive 3,114 theaters but averaged a weak $2,477 per site. 61% of the gross came from 3D screens which was the one bit of good news. Reviews were mostly favorable, but competition for horror fans came from Final Destination 5 which just bowed last week with its own style of branded 3D chills.
          That film followed with an identical gross falling 57% to $7.7M giving Warner Bros. $32.3M in ten days. A $45-50M final seems likely. 30 Minutes or Less dropped by 52% in its second weekend taking in $6.4M. With a ten-day sum of $25.9M, look for a $40M final for Sony.
          The fourth and final new wide release of the weekend, the Anne Hathaway drama One Day, failed to make much of a dent with women debuting to only $5.1M. The Focus release averaged a mild $2,952 from 1,721 theaters and faced intense direct competition from The Help which has much more must-see buzz surrounding it. Reviews were very negative too.
          Rounding out the top ten was the comedy Crazy, Stupid, Love with $4.8M, off just 32%, for a $64.3M cume.

# Title Aug 19 - 21


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 The Help $ 20,018,659


2
$ 71,340,829 Disney
2 Rise of the Planet of the Apes 16,119,502


3
133,583,862 Fox
3 Spy Kids: All the Time in the World 11,644,672


1
11,644,672 Weinstein Co.
4 Conan the Barbarian 10,021,215


1
10,021,215 Lionsgate
5 The Smurfs 7,802,377


4
117,546,882 Sony
6 Fright Night 7,714,388


1
7,714,388 Disney
7 Final Destination 5 7,703,466


2
32,326,686 Warner Bros.
8 30 Minutes or Less 6,402,602


2
25,864,430 Sony
9 One Day 5,079,566


1
5,079,566 Focus
10 Crazy, Stupid, Love 4,797,364


4
64,266,969 Warner Bros.










11 Harry Potter/Deathly Hallows Part 2 4,511,411


6
366,007,900 Warner Bros.
12 Cowboys & Aliens 4,215,780


4
89,498,305 Universal
13 Captain America: The First Avenger 4,115,529


5
164,747,643 Paramount
14 The Change-Up 2,824,945


3
31,970,285 Universal
15 Glee Live! 3D 1,804,598


2
10,443,883 Fox
16 Horrible Bosses 1,279,350


7
112,574,996 Warner Bros.
17 Sarah's Key 770,049


5
3,072,884 Weinstein Co.
18 Transformers: Dark of the Moon 606,276


8
348,540,006 Paramount
19 Midnight in Paris 552,103


14
50,614,946 Sony Classics
20 Friends With Benefits 533,670


5
54,712,145 Sony