This weekend the cineplex a few yuks in the Black Swan-riffing spoof sequel Scary Movie 5 (reviews); Brian Helgeland's Jackie Robinson biopic 42 (reviews) is history come alive; Two other films of note start limited bows--Ben Affleck, Olga Kurylenko, and Javier Bardem travel To The Wonder (reviews) for writer/director Terrence Malick; Technology is put to the test in director:Henry Alex Rubin's Disconnect (reviews)
Gregg Kilday of THR:
Scary Movie 5, a parody of horror movies, and 42, a biopic about a baseball legend Jackie Robinson, will battle it out for the box office title this weekend, with pre-release tracking suggesting a close game that might not be decided until the final innings. At the moment, surveys suggest both movies are on track to pull in somewhere around $17.5 million each.
Scary Movie is the latest installment in the long-running franchise from The Weinstein Company’s Dimension label that dates back to 2000. Malcolm D. Lee, who last directed 2008’s Soul Men, has taken over the directing reins, and the cast is something of a rogue’s gallery of bold-faced names including Charlie Sheen, Lindsay Lohan, Simon Rex and Ashley Tisdale. Rated PG-13, it will open in 3,402 locations
The previous film in the series, Scary Movie 4, opened to $40 million in April, 2006. But there have been a lot of variations on the horror spoof since then -- like A Haunted House, starring Marlon Wayans, which opened to $18.1 million this past January -- so Dimension isn’t looking for Scary Movie 5 to post the kind of numbers its predecessors saw. The new Scary cost just $19.5 million, and the company is looking for an opening in the mid-to-high teen millions.
Also in the on-bat circle -- get ready for lots of baseball metaphors this weekend -- is 42, financed by Legendary Pictures, whose CEO Thomas Tull personally produced, and distributed by Warners. Written and directed by Brian Helgeland (A Knight’s Tale), the film stars Chadwick Boseman as Robinson, who integrated baseball when he joined the Brooklyn Dodger line-up in 1947. Also on hand is Harrison Ford as the Dodgers general manager Branch Rickey.
Warners has paved the way for the movie, which carries a $40 million price tag, with an extensive word-of-mouth screening program -- it showed it to various teams, including the Los Angeles Dodgers during spring training -- and will also launch it with 10 p.m. showings on Thursday night. Friday, the PG-13-rated movie will be playing in 3,002 locations throughout North America, and the studio is anticipating an opening weekend gross of about $15 million.
It may not be immediately clear, though, which of this weekend’s two new wide releases will ultimately have the upper-hand. Appealing to younger moviegoers, Scary is likely to be the top film on Friday. But then 42 -- which is expected to attract older male sports fans but could also expand to include African-American audiences and women drawn to its love story -- could play stronger on Saturday.
Sony/Tristar’s Evil Dead, which led the list last weekend with a $25.8 million bow, is expected to drop the 45 to 50 per cent that is typical of horror movies. So that should leave room for Scary and 42 to contest for the top-two spots.
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