Sunday, November 06, 2011

Cat Beats Burglars

Wow! The CG animated Puss N-Boots pulls off an upset of Brett Ratner's comedy Tower Heist...



Pamela McClintock of THR:

In a dramatic weekend of highs and lows at the domestic box office, DreamWorks Animation and Paramount's Puss in Boots purred its way to a $33 million second weekend--a mere 3 pecent drop from its $34.1 million debut--while Brett Ratner's Ben Stiller-Eddie Murphy broad action comedy opened to a disappointing $25.1 million.

Paramount and DreamWorks Animation had contended that last weekend's freak early storm on the East Coast took business away from Puss in Boots, and they proved to be right, based on the 3D toon's record-breaking hold. The family film scored the tiniest drop ever for a non-holiday film, beat only by the 10 percent second weekend dip for Twister.

Paramount said the decision to move up the opening of Puss in Boots by one week, from Nov. 4 to Halloween weekend, paid off in spades, and that the film essentially enjoyed a two-weekend opening. Puss in Boots' 10-day domestic cume is $75.5 million, still slightly behind other recent toons at the same point in time, but DreamWorks Animation hopes to catch up next weeked, which is the Veteran's Day holiday.

Heading into the weekend, Tower Heist was widely projected to the favored winner at the domestic box office, while tracking showed Puss in Boots grossing less than $25 million.

Overseas, Puss in Boots grossed $15 million from just four markets for an international total of $39 million--including a record-breaking $35 million in Russia, where it is already the No. 4 toon of all time. Puss in Boots' worldwide total is $114.5 milllion.

Tower Heist's underwhelming performance is a blow for Universal and Ratner, although the studio said the pic--also starring Casey Affleck, Alan Alda, Tea Leoni, Michael Pena and Gabourey Sidibe--still fell within its estimated opening of $25 million to $30 million weekend (insiders say Universal needed the heist pic to open to at least $30 million.

The $85 million Tower Heist was produced by Imagine Entertainment's Brian Grazer and Kim Roth, with Relativity Media putting up some of the financing.

Overseas, Tower Heist opened to a so-so $9.5 million from 23 territories for a worldwide bow of $34.6 million. In the U.S., the pic received a B CinemaScore and skewed older, despite being a broad PG-13 comedy. More than 70% of the audience was over the age of 25, while only 12 percent were between the ages of 18 and 24, and 15 percent, under the age of 18 (that demo gave the film the best grade, an A-). Males made up 56 percent of the audience.

Universal said Tower Heist was the victim of the overall soft marketplace. This weekend alone, domestic box office revenues were down 25 percent from a year ago.

"I think the film was impacted by what I believe is a general moviegoing malaise. I think Tower Heist is a terrifc film that was well marketed, and audiences enjoyed their experience, based on exit polls," Universal president of domestic distribution Nikki Rocoo said.

New Line and Warner Bros.' A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas also came in on the low end of expectations, debuting to $13.1 million, well behind the $18 million projected by tracking services. However, the R-rated stoner comedy cost only $20 million to produce, so New Line and Warners' exposure is limited. Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay opened to $14.9 million.

In the latest pic, Harold and Kumar--played by John Cho and Kal Penn--go in search for the perfect Christmas tree after Kumar destroys the original. The film, also starring Neil Patrick Harris, is packed with 3D gimmicks (think smoke rings) and received a B CinemaScore.

Overseas, Puss in Boots grossed $15 million from just four markets for an international total of $39 million--including a record-breaking $35 million in Russia, where it is already the No. 4 toon of all time. Puss in Boots' worldwide total is $114.5 milllion.


Top 10 Domestic Weekend Box Office Nov. 4-Nov. 6

1. Puss in Boots (2), Paramount/DreamWorks Animation/3,963, $32.1 million, $75.5 million

2. Tower Heist (1), Universal/3,367, $25.1 million

3. A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas (1), Warner Bros./New Line/2,875, $13.1 million

4. Paranormal Activity 3 (3), Paramount/,3,286, $8.5 million, $95.3 million

5. In Time (2), Fox/New Regency/3,127, $7.7 million, $24.2 million

6. Footloose (4), Paramount/2,41, $4.6 milion, $44.8 million

7. Real Steel (5), Disney/DreamWorks/2,438, /$3.4 million, $78.8 million

8. The Rum Diary (2), FilmDistrict/GK Films/2,292, $3 million, $10.4 million

9. The Ides of March (5) Sony/Cold Creek/1,391, $2 million, $36.8 million

10. Moneyball (7), Sony/1,276, $1.9 million, $70.3 million

Next: Leonardo DiCaprio is J. Edgar in director  Clint Eastwood's biopic: Henry Cavill leads the Immortals into battle against Mickey Rourke; Adam Sandler plays both Jack and Jill in his latest comedy...

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