Carrey's 'Christmas Carol' wraps up $31M weekend
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jim Carrey's Scrooge collected holiday
donations from movie fans with his new take on ``A Christmas
Carol,'' which took in $31 million to open as the weekend's top
movie.
The Disney animated version of the Charles Dickens classic
knocked the King of Pop out of the No. 1 spot as ``Michael
Jackson's This Is It'' slipped to second place with $14 million,
according to studio estimates Sunday.
Sony's ``This Is It,'' presenting rehearsal performances Jackson
shot before his death last June, raised its domestic total to $57.9
million. Worldwide, ``This Is It'' has taken in $186.5 million.
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Featuring Carrey as Ebenezer Scrooge and also as the three
holiday ghosts that show Scrooge the error of his miserly ways, ``A
Christmas Carol'' came in on the low end of Disney's expectations
for opening weekend.
On the other end of the spectrum, Lionsgate's acclaimed drama
``Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire'' had a
spectacular start, pulling in $1.8 million in just 18 theaters,
averaging $100,000 a cinema. That compares with an $8,418 average
for ``A Christmas Carol'' in 3,683 theaters.
``Precious'' had a record average for films opening in 10 or
more theaters. Others that have averaged $100,000 or more typically
debut in only a few cinemas.
The weekend brought a rush of other new movies, led by George
Clooney's comedy ``The Men Who Stare at Goats,'' which finished at
No. 3 with $13.3 million. The Overture Films release is a satiric
look at U.S. military efforts to create ``warrior monks'' who can
predict the future or walk through walls.
Debuting in fourth place with $12.5 million was Universal's
``The Fourth Kind,'' starring Milla Jovovich as a psychologist
studying alien abductions in Alaska.
Cameron Diaz and James Marsden's sci-fi tale ``The Box'' opened
at No. 6 with $7.9 million. The Warner Bros. thriller centers on a
couple given a mysterious box that can provide them $1 million, but
at the cost of a stranger's life.
With nearly two months of playing time through the holidays,
Disney is counting on steady business for ``A Christmas Carol,''
particularly over Thanksgiving weekend and in the buildup to
Christmas itself.
``You have to play these things for the long term,'' said Chuck
Viane, Disney's head of distribution. ``You've got to have the
patience and you've got to pick the right weekend. For us, the days
when the malls turned to Christmas stores is when we wanted to
go.''
Director Robert Zemeckis shot the movie using the same
performance-capture technology used on his 2004 holiday offering
``The Polar Express.'' Carrey and his co-stars acted on a bare
soundstage as digital cameras caught their performances, with
computer animators later adding costumes, sets, props and other
effects.
``A Christmas Carol'' came in ahead of ``Polar Express,'' which
had an opening weekend of $23.5 million. But it fell well short of
the $55.1 million opening for Carrey's previous holiday tale, ``Dr.
Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas'' in 2000.
Holiday-themed films tend to hold up well through the season,
among them Disney's ``The Santa Clause'' comedies. After its modest
start, ``The Polar Express'' went on to become a $160 million hit
by the end of its run and has become a holiday perennial in
rereleases in huge-screen IMAX theaters.
``A Christmas Carol'' did three-fourths of its business in
theaters showing 3-D versions. Huge-screen IMAX theaters, which
represented only 5 percent of the theater count, accounted for $4.5
million, or 14.5 percent, of the movie's total gross, said Greg
Foster, IMAX chairman and president.
``Precious,'' which won the top awards at last January's
Sundance Film Festival, stars newcomer Gabourey Sidibe as a Harlem
teen who gradually rises above an upbringing of incest, abuse and
illiteracy.
After Sundance, Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry signed on as
executive producers, helping to spread the word on ``Precious,''
which has earned acclaim from critics and audiences at other film
festivals. The film has Academy Awards buzz as a best-picture
contender, along with Oscar prospects for Sidibe, co-star Mo'Nique
and director Lee Daniels.
The movie started in only four cities - New York, Los Angeles,
Atlanta and Chicago. Lionsgate plans to expand it this Friday to
five more - Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Dallas
and Houston, then take it into wide release Nov. 20.
``A lot of movie-goers are not happy with the release plan right
now, because it's not in their cities yet,'' said David Spitz, head
of distribution for Lionsgate. ``That's always a good sign.''
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and
Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final figures will
be released Monday.
1. ``A Christmas Carol,'' $31 million.
2. ``Michael Jackson's This Is It,'' $14 million.
3. ``The Men Who Stare at Goats,'' $13.3 million.
4. ``The Fourth Kind,'' $12.5 million.
5. ``Paranormal Activity,'' $8.6 million.
6. ``The Box,'' $7.9 million.
7. ``Couples Retreat,'' $6.4 million.
8. ``Law Abiding Citizen,'' $6.2 million.
9. ``Where the Wild Things Are,'' $4.2 million.
10. ``Astro Boy,'' $2.6 million.
On the Net:
http://www.hollywood.com/boxoffice
Universal Pictures and Focus Features are owned by NBC
Universal, a unit of General Electric Co.; Sony Pictures, Sony
Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.;
Paramount and Paramount Vantage are divisions of Viacom Inc.;
Disney's parent is The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is a division of
The Walt Disney Co.; 20th Century Fox, Fox Searchlight Pictures and
Fox Atomic are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are
units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a consortium of
Providence Equity Partners, Texas Pacific Group, Sony Corp.,
Comcast Corp., DLJ Merchant Banking Partners and Quadrangle Group;
Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC Films is
owned by Rainbow Media Holdings, a subsidiary of Cablevision
Systems Corp.; Rogue Pictures is owned by Relativity Media LLC;
Overture Films is a subsidiary of Liberty Media Corp.
11/08/09 13:35
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