Film Weekly

Another Hollywood weekend hangover

June 17 - 23, 2009
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The Warner Bros comedy The Hangover hauled in $33.4 million (BD12.48 million) to remain the top box-office draw for a second straight weekend, according to studio estimates.

The tale of a Las Vegas bachelor party gone to extremes raised its total to $105.4 million after 10 days in theatres. It was the summer's first movie to finish at No.1 for two weekends in a row.

Disney's latest Pixar Animation hit, the action comedy Up came in a close second again with $30.5 million. That lifts the acclaimed animated film's total to $187.2 million.

Debuting at No. 3 with $25 million was Sony's action remake The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3. The thriller stars Denzel Washington as a dispatcher matching wits against John Travolta as the mastermind of a subway hijacking.

Rory Bruer, head of distribution for Sony, said he was pleased with the results on The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 and that studio executives expect it to hold up well, since it drew mainly older viewers who do not rush out to see movies over opening weekend.

"Third place and happy about it," Bruer said.

Eddie Murphy delivered a dud with the Paramount family comedy Imagine That, which debuted at No. 6 with a lacklustre $5.7 million. The movie features Murphy as a

work-obsessed dad whose daughter's three imaginary friends make him a financial whiz with their smart stock-market picks.

The overall box office was down sharply from the same weekend a year ago, when The Incredible Hulk led with a $55.4 million weekend. Total revenues this weekend came in at $140 million, off 22 per cent from last year's, according to Hollywood.com box-office analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

It was the third straight weekend that studio receipts declined, continuing a slide that has chilled a red-hot year for Hollywood. Earlier in the year, revenues had surged by more than 15 percent compared to 2008, but the box office now is ahead by only 11 per cent.

"The growth rate for the summer box office is stalled. Every week we're systematically dropping down," Dergarabedian said. "That doesn't mean things are terrible. It just means that compared to last year, it was a great weekend for a `Hangover' but not a great weekend for the industry."

A handful of new movies did well in limited release, including Francis Ford Coppola's drama Tetro, which took in $31,339 in two theatres for a solid average of $15,670 a cinema. That compared to an $8,133 average in 3,074 theatres for Pelham 1 2 3 and $1,895 in 3,008 cinemas for Imagine That.

Released by Coppola's American Zoetrope studio, Tetro stars Vincent Gallo as an expatriate writer forced to reacquaint himself with a painful family history when his

younger brother comes to visit.

Sony Pictures Classics' sci-fi tale ÇMoonÈ pulled in $145,218 in eight theatres for an $18,152 average. The film stars Sam Rockwell as a lonesome, homesick worker on the

lunar surface whose grip on reality is challenged when a second version of himself appears.

Magnolia Pictures' documentary Food, Inc. grossed $61,400 in three theatres for a $20,467 average. The film examines the downsides and health hazards of our

mass-produced food chain.

1. The Hangover, $33.4 million.

2. Up, $30.5 million.

3. The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3, $25 million.

4. Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian,

$9.6 million.

5. Land of the Lost, $9.2 million.

6. Imagine That, $5.7 million.

7. Star Trek, $5.6 million.

8. Terminator Salvation, $4.7 million.

9. Angels & Demons, $4.2 million.

10. Drag Me to Hell, $3.9 million.







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