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September 6, 2010
'American' hits box office bull's-eye
By REUTERS
LOS ANGELES - In the battle of the box office assassins, A-lister George Clooney barely mustered more firepower with his new chart-topper “The American” than the relatively unknown star of “Machete,” as the summer moviegoing season wrapped feebly during the Labour Day holiday weekend. “The American,” in which Clooney plays a laconic gunslinger holed up in a picturesque Italian village, earned $16.4 million across the United States and Canada during the four days beginning Sept. 3, distributor Focus Features said Monday. “Machete,” a violent fantasy starring character actor Danny Trejo as a Mexican hitman with a penchant for sharp objects, came in at No. 2 with $14.0 million, said 20th Century Fox. Both studios said they were happy with the openings, which exceeded modest expectations, even if the movies are not destined for box office greatness. Clooney’s movies, for example, usually end up in the $30 million to $40 million range, and Focus doubted the new one would buck that trend. The top 10 boasted one other newcomer, the optimistically titled Drew Barrymore romantic comedy “Going the Distance,” which stalled at the outset. It came in at No. 5 with a disappointing $8.6 million, said Warner Bros. Pictures. Both “Machete” and “Going the Distance” opened Friday, while “The American” got a two-day head start and has earned $19.5 million to date. Last weekend’s champion, the Sony Pictures heist thriller “Takers,” slipped to No. 3 with $13.5 million; its 11-day haul rose to $40 million. Sales for the top-12 films fell to their lowest level in almost a year, a fitting coda to a summer lineup whose weak performance was obscured by the 3D boom. While sales from the first weekend in May through Monday are projected to break last year’s record, the increase comes solely from higher ticket prices. The number of tickets sold — a better gauge of Hollywood’s health — hit its lowest level since 1997. Tracking firm Hollywood.com Box-Office predicted summer attendance would come in at 552 million tickets sold, a 2.6 percent drop from last year, and the lowest since 1997 when 540 million were sold. It forecast summer receipts of $4.35 billion, up 2.4 percent from last summer’s record levels. Final tallies will be released Tuesday. Movies released in 3D, such as “Toy Story 3,” “Cats & Dogs,” “Despicable Me,” and “The Last Airbender,” allowed movie theaters to charge an average premium of $3 per ticket. In some markets, this pushed the ticket price to almost $20. The average ticket price for all movies was $7.88, according to Hollywood.com Box-Office. Sales are expected to remain weak for the next few weeks as the studios dump their under-performers so that they can focus on prestige pictures catering to awards voters and on holiday-season crowd-pleasers. Focus Features is a unit of General Electric Co. 20th Century Fox is a unit of News Corp. Sony Pictures is a unit of Sony Corp. Warner Bros. Pictures is a unit of Time Warner Inc. The top movies at the North American box office Following are the top 10 movies at the box office during the four-day Labour Day holiday weekend in the United States and Canada beginning Sept. 3, led by the new release “The American,” according to studio estimates compiled Monday by Reuters. 1 (+) The American ................. $ 16.4 million 2 (+) Machete ...................... $ 14.0 million 3 (1) Takers ....................... $ 13.5 million 4 (2) The Last Exorcism ............ $ 8.8 million 5 (+) Going the Distance ........... $ 8.6 million 6 (3) The Expendables .............. $ 8.5 million 7 (5) The Other Guys ............... $ 6.7 million 8 (4) Eat Pray Love ................ $ 6.3 million 9 (7) Inception .................... $ 5.9 million 10 (8) Nanny McPhee Returns ......... $ 4.7 million NOTE: Last weekend’s rankings in parenthesis; (+) denotes new release. “The American” opened Wednesday, “Machete” and “Going the Distance” Friday. Inception ...................... $ 278.4 million The Other Guys ................. $ 108.1 million The Expendables ................ $ 94.1 million Eat Pray Love .................. $ 70.4 million Takers ......................... $ 40.0 million The Last Exorcism .............. $ 33.6 million Nanny McPhee Returns ........... $ 23.5 million The American ................... $ 19.5 million Machete ........................ $ 14.0 million Going the Distance ............. $ 8.6 million “The American” was released by Focus Features, and “Nanny McPhee” by Universal Pictures. Both are units of General Electric Co’s NBC Universal. “Takers,” “Eat Pray Love” and “The Other Guys” were released by Columbia Pictures, a unit of Sony Corp. “Machete” was released by 20th Century Fox, a unit of News Corp. “The Last Exorcism” and “The Expendables” were released by Lionsgate, a unit of Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. “Going the Distance” and “Inception” were released by Warner Bros. Pictures, a unit of Time Warner Inc. |
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