by Brandon Gray
Ed Helms, Zach Galifianakis and Bradley Cooper in The Hangover
HOLLYWOOD (RPRN) 6/15/2009–The good times continued to roll for The Hangover and Up, though not so much for the new movies and the box office as a whole. Hangover kept its buzz going with an estimated $33.4 million, while Up maintained its slow descent with an estimated $30.5 million. Like last weekend, the race between the two pictures was tight: Hangover was tops on Friday, Up led Saturday, and Sunday is down to which movie’s studio had the more accurate projection. While Hangover and Up were bustling, overall business was down 22 percent from the same weekend last year and had the lowest attendance for the timeframe in over a decade.
Imbibing an exceptional $105.4 million in ten days, The Hangover saw the smallest dip among nationwide releases (if estimates hold), down 26 percent. The ribald comedy held better than Knocked Up at the same point, though not quite as well as Wedding Crashers. Regardless of the percentage drops, though, it’s grossed significantly more than those pictures at the ten-day mark, even when adjusted for ticket price inflation, and has flown way above genre norms.
Up eased 31 percent and its tally climbed to $187.2 million in 17 days, the third-highest total of the year behind Star Trek and Monsters Vs. Aliens. The Pixar comedy adventure’s third weekend fall was less than Finding Nemo’s. Like past weekends, 52 percent of Up’s gross was generated from 3D showings.
Denzel Washington in The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3
Neither speeding nor stalling, The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 claimed an estimated $25 million on approximately 4,400 screens at 3,074 sites. The remake of the 1974 thriller of the same name posted an average opening for a Denzel Washington action vehicle, delivering similar attendance out of the gate to Man on Fire and John Q. among others, and it was in the same attendance range as co-star John Travolta’s Swordfish and Broken Arrow. In its marketing, Taking appeared to have a typical hostage thriller plot, distinguished mostly by its dueling lead actors. Hence, its typical debut as there wasn’t a compelling reason to see it in theaters beyond moviegoers’ fondness for the stars or the genre. Distributor Sony Pictures’ research indicated that 54 percent of Taking’s audience was male and 62 percent was over 30 years old.
The weekend’s other new nationwide release, Imagine That, sparked little interest, opening to an estimated $5.7 million on around 3,200 screens at 3,008 sites. That was about the same as the last Eddie Murphy family comedy, Meet Dave. The picture was in the same vein as Bedtime Stories and other fantastical family comedies, but lacked a tantalizing premise in its low key, generic advertising. A father receiving stock tips from his daughter’s imaginary friends just didn’t cut it, especially in a market with more spectacular family movies like Up and Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian.
Another disappointment aimed at families, Land of the Lost plummeted 51 percent to an estimated $9.2 million for $35 million in ten days. Scheduled as the third family comedy adventure in a row after the Night at the Museum sequel and Up, only with some ads pushing adult humor among other failings, Land failed to gain traction. The Night at the Museum sequel pulled ahead with an estimated $9.6 million, off 34 percent for $143.4 million in 24 days.
Meanwhile, Star Trek had another solid hold, retreating 33 percent to an estimated $5.6 million for a $232 million tally in 38 days, and Terminator Salvation and Angels & Demons remained the weakest of their franchises but held better than their predecessors.
Source: Box Office Mojo
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