Edgar Wright notes…
Songs featured in trailer.
Archive for May, 2010
Trailer – Scott Pilgrim Vs The World
Monday, May 31st, 2010True Grit: The Sands of Tommy
Monday, May 31st, 2010May 31, 2010
The pre-ordained juggernaut of Sex and the City 2 was naut. Smiling ogre the Memorial holiday weekend was Shrek Forever After with an estimated $55.6 million. The weekend’s incoming box office behemoths — Sex 2 and Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time — duked it out for the Miss Congeniality spot with photo finish results of $37.3 million and $37.9 million respectively.
Activity in the niches was restrained and while Bollywood took a pass, both the Tamil Singram with $108,000 at 23 venues and the Telugu Golimar with $36,800 on 12 screens were off to good starts. Exclusives for several imports were also quite encouraging with English-track Agora from Spain posting $42,400 at two sites and French imports Micmacs and Mademoiselle Chambon with opening salvos of $51,400 from four theaters theaters and $24,900 in two playdeates respectively.
The session also served up a new dish of zombies from George Romero with Survival of the Dead supping on a modest $52,600 from 20 screens while the 50th anniversary restoration of Breathless left them gasping with $37,100 from three new waves.
With results of incoming fare several notches below expectations it wasn’t a terribly festive holiday frame. Box office was a meager 1% (3-day to 3-day portion) improved from the immediate prior non-holiday weekend. It also amounted to a 14% decline from 2009 when charts were topped by debuts of Night at the Museum 2 and Terminator: Salvation with $70.1 million and $51.9 million.
Pulling out all the stops with a full bore marketing blitz, Sex and the City 2 was expected to reap a $60 million plus debut and advance sales as well as a pre-weekend Thursday gross of $14.2 million signaled that result. Instead revenues dropped progressively in subsequent days and its 5-day total barely exceeded $50 million.
The film nonetheless set a number of arcane records including topping 1987’s Beverly Hills Cop 2 gross, which had been the top R-Rated Memorial weekend champ. Its 90% female demographic also appears to be a record.
International results were more buoyant with top rankings in Great Britain of $9 million and Germany providing $7.2 million of a $27 million total from 17 territories.
The oft-delayed release of Prince of Persia was also expected to open more forcefully. It bowed internationally last weekend with $18 million in 23 countries. This weekend it ramped up to slightly more than $60 million overseas for a $100 million global weekend.
Meanwhile high profile holdovers continued to lose traction with Robin Hood pushing hard to get to a face-saving $100 million domestic gross. Mature audiences appear to be somewhat desperate for a fix and that’s been of great benefit to the likes of City Island, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Harry Brown and The Secret in Their Eyes, which continue to hold screens despite the onslaught of summer blockbusters.
-by Leonard Klady
Weekend Estimates: May 28 – May 31, 2010
| Title | Distributor | Gross (average) | % change * | Theaters | Cume |
| Shrek Forever After | Par | 55.6 (12,740) | -39% | 4367 | 145.4 |
| Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time | BV | 37.9 (10,390) | New | 3646 | 37.9 |
| Sex and the City 2 | WB | 37.3 (10,830) | New | 3445 | 51.5 |
| Iron Man II | Par | 20.6 (5,410) | -38% | 3804 | 279.2 |
| Robin Hood | Uni | 13.5 (4,000) | -45% | 3373 | 86.2 |
| Letters to Juliet | Summit | 7.2 (2,550) | -35% | 2825 | 37.9 |
| Just Wright | Fox | 2.7 (2,230) | -51% | 1195 | 18.7 |
| Date Night | Fox | 2.2 (1,980) | -39% | 1126 | 93.9 |
| MacGruber | Uni | 1.9 (750) | -63% | 2546 | 7.6 |
| How to Train Your Dragon | Par | 1.4 (1,730) | -45% | 825 | 213 |
| Nightmare on Elm Street | WB | 1.1 (1,280) | -62% | 891 | 61.9 |
| Alice in Wonderland | BV | .66 (1,940) | 7% | 341 | 333.1 |
| Babies | Focus | .63 (2,090) | -35% | 301 | 6.1 |
| The Secret in Their Eyes | Sony Classics | .57 (3,960) | -4% | 144 | 3.4 |
| Girl with the Dragon Tattoo | Music Box/Alliance | .53 (2,880) | 5% | 184 | 7.8 |
| City Island | Anchor Bay | .51 (2,540) | -3% | 201 | 4.8 |
| Hubble 3-D | WB | .41 (8,660) | 11% | 47 | 7.1 |
| The Back-Up Plan | CBS | .34 (870) | -71% | 391 | 36.6 |
| Diary of a Wimpy Kid | Fox | .33 (1,170) | -5% | 283 | 62.8 |
| Kites | Big Picture | .32 (1,780) | -73% | 181 | 1.5 |
| Weekend Total ($500,000+ Films) | $184.30 | - | - | - | |
| % Change (Last Year) | - | -14% | - | - | - |
| % Change (Last Week) | - | 1% | - | - | - |
| Also debuting/expanding | |||||
| Please Give | Sony Classics | .24 (4,420) | -13% | 55 | 1.4 |
| Harry Brown | IDP | .16 (3,080) | -24% | 53 | 1.1 |
| Singam | Sun | .11 (4,710) | New | 23 | 0.11 |
| Solitary Man | Anchor Bay | .11 (17,750) | -11% | 6 | 0.24 |
| Survival of the Dead | Magnolia | 52,600 (2,630) | New | 20 | 0.05 |
| Micmacs | Sony Classics | 51,400 (12,850) | New | 4 | 0.05 |
| Agora | Newmarket | 42,400 (21,200) | New | 2 | 0.04 |
| Breathless (reissue) | Rialto | 37,100 (12,370) | New | 3 | 0.04 |
| Golimar | Ficus | 36,800 (3,070) | New | 12 | 0.04 |
| Mademoiselle Chambon | Lorber | 24,900 (12,450) | New | 2 | 0.02 |
Domestic Market Share: January 1 – May 27, 2010
| Distributor (releases) | Gross | Market Share |
| Fox (8) | 885.1 | 21.40% |
| Paramount (8) | 813.5 | 19.70% |
| Warner Bros. (15) | 741.4 | 17.90% |
| Buena Vista (8) | 477.9 | 11.50% |
| Universal (9) | 289.3 | 7.00% |
| Sony (13) | 241.8 | 5.80% |
| Lionsgate (7) | 195.2 | 4.70% |
| Summit (7) | 98.1 | 2.40% |
| Overture (4) | 67.4 | 1.60% |
| Fox Searchlight (3) | 63.2 | 1.50% |
| MGM (1) | 49.7 | 1.20% |
| CBS (2) | 48.7 | 1.20% |
| Weinstein Co. (4) | 34.7 | 0.80% |
| Sony Classics (11) | 31.6 | 0.80% |
| Other * (149) | 105.1 | 2.50% |
| * none greater than 0.4% | 4142.7 | 100.00% |
Agora: The Great Atheist Film?
Monday, May 31st, 2010![]() |
Alejandro Amenabar’s excellent Agora opened this past week in limited release and I can’t help but wonder why a film that resembles Gladiator (except smarter and more entertaining) is being dumped by its distributor at the end of May rather than given a wide-release on thousands of screens.
I thought the only reason this could be so is if the film was horrifyingly awful, but it’s not. In fact, it’s one of the best movies I’ve seen so far this year. So the only explanation for why a film that has an epic-scope but is being released as if it had an indie-focus is because of its about religion versus science.
The film is about astronomer/philosopher Hypatia (played perfectly by Rachel Weisz), a woman who was seen as an intellectual equal amongst the men in Alexandria in 391 A.D. She teaches a class at the Library of Alexandria about her theories on whether or not the sun revolves around the Earth or vice versa. In her class is the young, charming Orestes (Oscar Isaac) who is after her heart. At home is her smart and loyal slave Davus (Max Minghella) who has loved her for a long time. Outside the walls of the library, however, there is a war shaping up between the pagans and the Christians. The pagans have been in power for a long time, but the Christians are growing in numbers and are growing more violent by the day.
I’ll stop with the plot description now. The truth of the matter is that this is not a film about Christianity being inherently evil, per se. It’s about the mob mentality that can erupt when there is a combination of 1) lack of education, 2) poverty and 3) an influx of any religion. The movie illustrates how easy it is for the weak-willed to fall prey to fundamentalism and extremism (starting to sound familiar?). It’s not that religion is evil, it’s that it can be used as a tool for intolerance. This is illustrated best by the scene in Agora when the Christians ransack the library, destroying books and information. For what purpose? Because it is of no use for them to read books when they have the only book that matters.
I was especially struck by a scene in which Cyril (Sami Samir), the pope-like figure in Alexandria, asks Orestes to kneel before the bible that Cyril holds. When Orestes doesn’t kneel, the crowd turns on him, despite the fact that Orestes is a Christian. The reason he doesn’t kneel before the book that he believes in? Cyril has just called Hypatia a witch. For Orestes to kneel before the book in that moment wouldn’t just show that Orestes has faith in the bible, it would also show that Orestes agrees with everything else that Cyril has said.
This is a magnificent example of how religion can be twisted and poisoned depending on the person teaching and interpreting it. The logic becomes faulty if you believe every word out of the mouth of a sermonizer. When Orestes is escorted out of the crowd, he screams over and over again “I’m as Christian as you are” while stones are being hurled at him. Does this mean he is or isn’t a Christian? Is it Christian to stone someone who doesn’t believe the same way you do? Should any religion tolerate such a thing if we believe the words of their holy books?
Questions like these arise while watching Agora, but that is not to say that the film is just a polemic about why religion is evil. This wasn’t made by Christopher Hitchens (although I’d love to see that film). I think the target in Amenabar’s film isn’t really religion at all, it’s intolerance. D.W. Griffith may have used the title first, but it would be an apt one for this film as well. The character of Hypatia is not so much an atheist as she just doesn’t have an interest in religion. She is more fascinated by science. At one point a character says that she believes in “nothing” and she replies, “I believe in philosophy.” This scene illustrates perfectly the misconception about atheism, that if one doesn’t believe in god then one doesn’t believe in anything. Later on in the film, she tells someone, “you don’t question what you believe. I must.” That’s essentially the rallying cry of every agnostic in the world.
But look, this is not just a “smart” film about people in large rooms discussing religion (although there are a few scenes where that does happen). Rather, this is a film with epic scenes of battle and bloodshed. It might not have Russell Crowe fighting a tiger in an arena, but there are some pretty monumentally cool scenes here. It’s just that while other sword-and-sandal flicks might revel in the destruction in order to get the audience to say “oh cool, he just stabbed that guy,” this is a film that doesn’t glorify battle.
When it becomes apparent that the pagans will have to fight the Christians, Hypatia protects her students, saving them from the horrors they surely would have faced. And as audience, we are thinking, “thank goodness.” In any other film that is set in this era and deals with these circumstances, we would have been focusing more on those that did fight and what heroes they were. In Agora, the heroes are the ones who don’t react violently.
It’s not a perfect film. The love stories are not essential to the film, although it helps to deepen Hypatia as a character. She is someone who eschews the love of men. In fact, at one point she hands one of her suitors a cloth with her menstrual blood on it. She cannot understand how there could be any beauty in love since there is no beauty in her menstrual cycle. But the love story also is used to introduce us to the character of Davus who becomes radicalized when he becomes a Christian. He is used as a way of showing the audience how these things happen; he’s a slave, but he has more than so many others and he can help people by giving them the bread he has (although never mind that the bread isn’t his to give).
Rachel Weisz is truly astounding in this film, as she often is. Hypatia is not an easy character to play; she must be idealistic yet intelligent, a dreamer but a realist. Weisz is such a wonderful presence, so charismatic and likable that although her character is not as fleshed-out as she could be, she is still imbued with a certain vigor and humanism. The film doesn’t portray her as martyr, though, which makes sense because atheists don’t believe in martyrs anyway. Rather, they show the hypocrisy inherent in her secular humanism: she might be nice to her slaves, but she still has slaves. Hypatia is a good person overall, but she’s also a slave-owner.
The acting by the rest of the cast is all pretty spot-on, with Oscar Isaacs proving to be quite a commanding presence.
SPOILER WARNING
The final scene between he and Weisz is heartbreaking: Orestes is trying to figure out a way to beat Cyril, who has taken over the city. It is decided that everyone must be baptized, including Orestes’ closest advisor Hypatia. Hypatia refuses to do this and Orestes tells her that if she would just do it, then they could figure out a way to defeat Cyril, to which she replies, “Oh, Orestes. He’s already won.” Wow. Just wow. This scene is the most note-perfect illustration of why we cannot give in to religious intolerance and fundamentalism. But, truly, watch Weisz and Isaacs in this scene and how they make us feel what they are going through. Terrific work.
END SPOILER
I’ve always liked Alejandro Amenabar, but I never thought he had something like this in him. I thought Open Your Eyes and The Others were very good films with a lot of interesting ideas, but I didn’t find either one to be mind-blowing. And The Sea Inside was, I felt, a decent picture with a fantastic lead performance that covered up a lot of it’s flaws. But having seen Agora puts his career into a whole new perspective for me. Speaking of perspective, one of the most interesting things that Amenabar does is he pulls back – way back – every once in a while, from the action that we are seeing until we are in space staring at the Earth. It’s in these moments that we see just how small the problems in this film really are. They’re waging a war over different gods, which seems really silly when you take a step back and look at the big picture of the universe.
I was blown away by what I saw in Agora. It’s not a masterpiece, but it’s on that next level. Unlike so many “epic” pictures, this is one that doesn’t pander to a wide audience. Unfortunately, it’s going to suffer at the box office for that very reason. But I urge you, all of you, who enjoy seeing entertaining movies that give you a little nugget of wisdom, to please seek out Agora when it comes to a theater near you. At the very least, check it out on DVD. It’s one of the better films you’ll see this year.
Dennis Hopper, RIP
About a year and a half ago, I had the opportunity to moderate a SAG Q&A with Dennis Hopper after a screening of Elegy. To be able to meet the man who played Frank Booth was a dream come true for me. I asked him a bunch of questions about the film he was promoting and then a bunch about Blue Velvet (one of my favorite films and one of my favorite performances ever). He was smart, funny and unbelievably nice. We didn’t chitchat a lot before or after the Q&A. He arrived in a car, we did our Q&A and then I moderated as the audience asked him questions about acting, then he hopped in the back of the car and was driven away.
He was taller than I expected. He appears much shorter in his films. Between Easy Rider andBlue Velvet, he has given us so much material to study. What he accomplishes in those films is something unique, which is rare to say in this business. In the latter film, he is both terrifying and hilarious, often in the same scene…hell, often in the same sentence. I wanted to laugh, even as I was cowering behind my couch. For the guy who gave me that feeling – something I’ve never felt again – I’ll always be thankful. He was terrific in Hoosiers, Apocalypse Now, Speed, True Romance, etc. But nothing compares to Blue Velvet.
I remember reading once – and who knows if it’s true – that Dennis Hopper told David Lynchthat he had to play Frank Booth in Blue Velvet. When Lynch asked him why that was, Hopper apparently said, “Because I am Frank Booth.”
Rest in peace Frank.
Noah Forrest
May 31, 2010
Noah Forrest is a 26-year-old aspiring writer/filmmaker in New York City.
The opinions expressed in these columns are the writer’s and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Movie City News or any of its editors or other contributors.
Weekend Estimates by 4-Day Klady
Monday, May 31st, 2010
Even being generous to Sex & The City 2, comparing the end of the first Monday last time to the end of today (by estimate… which doesn’t include a 5th day), the franchise is off 18% from the last time. Being less generous, 5 days vs 5 days, it’s off 25%.
Once again, Hollywood helps prove that women are smarter than Hollywood sometimes thinks.
So they are probably looking at $120m or so domestic… if they get that far. It could be a steeper drop this time, as the quality of the film seems less likely to draw girls-night-out crowds the second weekend this time… and it wasn’t like the multiple was sensational the first time out.
But again… as will so many pictures… the real money for this film – they hope – will be foreign. You want to know the real reason they women were on camels? The first film did 2/3rds of its theatrical business overseas. Of course, it may well be that the world enjoys looking at the hedonistic pursuit of New York ideals of money and power and not just the next wave of parachute pants. We’ll see.
Sadly, $250 million worldwide, for a TV show converted for the second time with no directorial skills whatsoever to the big screen, is still just barely a breakeven proposition… no cash cow here. The budget for the first film was wildly inflated, but with $415 million in theatrical, the Shaye/Lynne New Line and after-the-fact distributor Warner Bros cleared budget and P&A before they ran out of theatrical rentals. This time, with the budget even more hyper-inflated – because the success of this show has always been about spending money, not characters, right? (huh?) – and domestic down, they will be waiting on foreign with the passion usually held for waiting on Friday numbers here… and then, they will be reliant on post-theatrical sales, TV and DVD, to make money or just to get out without red ink.
What’s intriguing is that SJP & Co can make a third movie… for $40 million… which is about what it should cost, max, and make a boatload of money, unless this film actually kills the franchise. But even if it does damage it severely… for a $40m budget… It would be hard for them not to do enough business to make it work. So unlike most problem sequels, the ball is still in the franchise’s court… they just need to deal with reality if they want to continue. And the cost of Vaseline going up.
Prince of Persia (I’ll skip the extended name, so as not to pretend that there will be a sequel) isn’t so lucky. Conceived as another big, PG-13 Bruckheimer ride movie, Jake Gyllenhaal ain’t Johnny Depp or Harrison Ford, the videogame with a strong narrative got in the way a lot more than a ride without one could have, and the wow factor was limited by effects we have all seen, not only before, but repeatedly. Worse none of this could be disguised in a trailer. And there was no single go-to-effect that made it a must-go movie.
As a result, PoP couldn’t muster Robin Hood business, much less the opening for the first The Mummy. It even did a third less at opening than the decade old Tomb Raider, which did have Ms Jolie as a valuable special effect. Her pecs way outdid Jake’s.
Shrek Forever After did about what it was supposed to do in a second weekend. No new story here, really. Winning the weekend indicates nothing but the weakness of the two new entries and the solid base for the Shrek franchise.
And there is a real chance that Shrek The Last wins again next weekend with a mid-20s number, the biggest threats of the weekend not being the presumed bigger movies (Greek and Killers), but the strong niche plays, Marmaduke (though I haven’t felt that they have found the strong marketing hook… aside from Owen Wilson and dogs) and Splice, which is not likely to be leggy, but could rise up and shock with a $30 million opening (or better) a la Species ($17m opening in 1995), which is what the campaign looks like to me, shy a lanky, sexy blond.
Iron Man 2 should hit $300 million in the next 10 days or so. It gets the benefit of First Summer Weekend and we’ll see if either or both Toy Story 3 or Twilight 3 can deliver $300 million domestic.
Guillermo Exits The Hobbit
Sunday, May 30th, 2010First and foremost… this is yet another reason to see Harry Sloan run out of town.
I never believed for a second that those managing the rotting carcass of MGM would shoot themselves in the foot by allowing The Hobbit and Bond to sit around gathering dust instead of generating hundreds of millions for a company that desperately needs it.. if only to pay back its debts. But here we are.
The Hobbit will survive. You can be sure that no one knows exactly what is going to happen, in terms of the eventual director of the film, but you can be 98.7% sure that it will still involve Team Jackson behind the scenes and they will not let it sink in quality.
Bond, however, is about one year from missing an entire movie from the cycle. The clock is ticking. And really, even if there isn’t a lost film, there will be years without revenue that could have had revenue.
I am sure that the twisted thinking inside MGM is that the package that is the studio is more valuable with these commodities as the highest order of bait than they are as working productions that start to be weighed down by reality.
But shouldn’t MGM, for the sake of its creditors, be doing everything possible to generate every dollar that they can as soon as they can? The fruit is already overripe.
Bottom line… if these two franchises move on before the next life of MGM is settled, no one needs the cowboys now rounding up the company.
As for Guillermo and Peter and Fran and Phillipa… this sucks. Really a shame. I’m sure Guillermo had a great time in NZ with everyone, but sitting around waiting to pull the trigger on sure thing is brutal. Just ask Joe Carnahan of Mission: Impossible 3.
In terms of the wider artistic picture, this exit and delay opens up some time on the WETA schedule. So expect someone to jump into Jim Cameron and Joe Letteri’s avatars at the last minute in a bit to do more than 3D. And of course, if that happens, it means that WETA will not be available for The Hobbit, when its ready to go, without at least a year’s warning. Or maybe WETA will sit on the schedule a little longer.
P.S. The story broke through OneRing.net, as is often PJ’s custom. Those who like to accuse others of stealing breaking news without crediting the originating source should probably be told-ja not to throw stones in glass houses.
PS ADD – 10a Monday - The story has been reflected to credit the source. Good.
The Iron Sheik (account verified) NSFW's Prince of Persia, Gary Coleman & More
Saturday, May 29th, 2010the_ironsheik the dennis hopper i meet in the big apple madison square he is legend like iron sheik god bless him http://bit.ly/bwMHs1
about 6 hours ago
the_ironsheik I beat the fuck out of the Jay gaylin, and the prince of persia. he fag no dick no balls motherfucker
about 10 hours ago
the_ironsheik laker i like the kobe. I play in the boston garden and beat the fuck out of that mexican tito santana there. i respect the boston
about 21 hours ago
the_ironsheik @OpieRadio bubba. you show me the respect when i come to the radio show. you are not like cocksucker fag motherfucker bubba
about 21 hours ago
the_ironsheik @stustone you intelligent to show the respect for the black brother gary coleman. he good man like intelligent jew
1 day ago
Dennis Hopper, actor, Elegy
Saturday, May 29th, 2010
Dennis Hopper Lives
Saturday, May 29th, 2010
Why? Why would a nice guy like you want to kill a genius? Feeling pretty good, huh? Why? Do you know that the man really likes you? He likes you. He really likes you. But he’s got something in mind for you. Aren’t you curious about that? I’m curious. I’m very curious. Are you curious? There’s something happening out here, man. You know something, man? I know something you that you don’t know. That’s right, Jack. The man is clear in his mind, but his soul is mad. Oh, yeah. He’s dying, I think. He hates all this. He hates it! But the man’s a…He reads poetry out loud, all right. And a voice…he likes you because you’re still alive. He’s got plans for you. No, I’m not gonna help you. You’re gonna help him, man. You’re gonna help him. I mean, what are they gonna say when he’s gone? ‘Cause he dies when it dies, when it dies, he dies! What are they gonna say about him? He was a kind man? He was a wise man? He had plans? He had wisdom? Bullshit, man! And am I gonna be the one that’s gonna set them straight? Look at me! Look at me! Wrong! [points to Willard] You!
I can think of no greater tribute to The Man than to hear his words, so here is his DP/30, recorded in his home in Venice, just before Christmas 2008, in connection to the film, Elegy.
(EDIT, 2;43p)
We’re having some server issues. Hopefully, you will not have a problem with them.
Here is the normal DP/30 page with the QT file.
Here is the mp3 of the conversation…
And here is the visually inferior Google Video streaming version…
And if you have problems with the rest, here is the URL for another server with the QT video – http://moviecitynews.com/views/dp30/hopper.mov
Dennis Hopper shoots
Saturday, May 29th, 2010

![[RIP] Dennis Hopper, Photographer.jpg](/archived/mcnblogs/mcindie/archives/images/%5BRIP%5D%20Dennis%20Hopper%2C%20Photographer.jpg)

Friday Estimates by Sex & The Klady
Saturday, May 29th, 2010
Sex & The Sequel is almost exactly where it was the first time around after Friday ended. This time took a full day on Thursday and midnight screenings Wednesday to do it. On the other hand, this time, their ebd of May opening is the holiday weekend and by the end of the weekend, the sequel should be up on the first film by about $10 million.
I am put in mind of Hellboy and Hellboy 2. As much as the core loved the first Hellboy and the audience was expanded by home viewing, the much bigger sequel grew marginally. The audience is the audience is the audience. In one case, both movies are apparently horrid (I can only couch for the first) and the other, both are very good. But both speak to a specific group with specific interests that reach beyond reviews and hype.
Still, it reminds us that there is a $150 million niche for women over 30 – and I would have to say, I’m pretty sure that women under 30 just look at the now-retro crew of S&TC and laugh, laugh, laugh… but not in a good way. They may not laugh so hard in a decade or so when they succumb to desperate hanging on, but as a 45-year-old man, I don’t find older actors wanting to make themselves look younger by standing next to younger women so funny anymore either. (I do still find it a bit pathetic.)
Prince of Persia doesn’t have Thursday to lean on… which should put the movie near $20 million behind Sext-ew by the end of its first holiday weekend. There really is no precedent for this number. It’s neither big nor small. You have to go all the way back to The Flintstones in 1994 to find a 4-day Memorial Day opening that is close to the projected number… and $37m back then was a lot more than it is now.
Thing is, even Terminator Salvation, which opened to $52m last Memorial Day, stopped at $125m domestic. It doubled that internationally, Mummy 3 – a truly horrible film – tripled their domestic overseas. Disney is going to have to do something like that to not lose money on this movie. (See: Old theory about loading the quarter with Alice DVD revenue.)
Shrek Forever After is running a little over $60 million behind S3 after 10 days and it looks like it’s going to get worse, not better. Should be around $140m by the end of the holiday. Madagascar doubled its gross from the end of its second weekend to the end… but it didn’t face a Pixar film landing about a month in (or at all, for that matter).
Iron Man 2 continues to ourpace the first film by about as much as the difference between the two opening weekends, though IM2 is starting to slide, day-by-day. Paramount will have to push hard to get it to $300m in a crowded June. Meanwhile, foreign remains ahead of the first film and the domestic gross, so you can count on IM2′s worldwide being bigger than the last one… though not by as much as anyone hoped for.
Dennis Hopper was 74: sweet glimpses
Saturday, May 29th, 2010“I mean, what are they going to say, man, when he’s gone? Huh? ‘Cos he dies, when it dies, man… when it dies, he dies, what are they going to say about him? What, are they gonna say he was a kind man, he was a wise man, he had plans, he had wisdom, bullshit man, am I gonna be the one that’s gonna set him straight, look at me! Wrong! You.”
Someday this world’s gonna end.
Below: A scene from Wenders’ The American Friend and Hopper at the opening of his recent Taos show.
Four Minutes of Knight & Day
Friday, May 28th, 2010What ARE You Talking About, Willis Dear Boy?
Friday, May 28th, 2010He was an icon
Stuck twixt Fetchit and FUBU
A tear and a smile
==========
ADD, 10p, from Fake Paramount…
We just secured remake rights to On The Right Track which will star a CGI Gary Coleman voiced by Billy West. See it in Imax 3-D next summer. about 4 hours ago via TweetDeck
As for our “On The Right Track” remake, just remember the Paramount movie making mantra: It’s only tasteless if it doesn’t turn a profit. about 4 hours ago via TweetDeck
Just signed Kenny Ortega 2 direct On The Right Track. Mr Ortega says “When it comes to making movies about dead black celebs, I’m the best!” about 4 hours ago via TweetDeck
DP/30 – The Special Relationshp director Richard Loncraine
Friday, May 28th, 2010The Special Relationship director Richard Loncraine
Friday, May 28th, 2010
BYOB Friday… Sex In Persia: The Sands Of Middle Age
Thursday, May 27th, 2010Kites Of Persia?
Thursday, May 27th, 2010When I looked at the NYT review of Prince of Persia, I wondered whether I was looking at a review of Kites for a second…


DreamWorks Animation
Thursday, May 27th, 2010Blog commenter Foamy Squirrel brought up some stats from the DreamWorks Animation annual report, which got me to look it up. And besides the immediate response, it occurred to me that DWA is one of the very rare companies these days that is in film, public, and small enough that their annual report has actual facts and figures in detail, not just the best and worst noted so shareholders can giggle or gasp.
Here is a chart covering their last 5 years (a pop-up)














