Pages

Friday, June 10, 2011

Childhood Memories Of Summer's Gone By

As J.J. Abrams pays homage to the Steven Spielberg films of the late 70's and 80's with the alien monster movie Super 8 the reviews for the throwback seem to indicate that it's a winner.

While the film adaptation of the famed book series Judy Moody also comes to the big screen this weekend in The Not Bummer Summer. The critics not as kind in that case



Pamela McClintock of THR

The pairing of J.J. Abrams and Steven Spielberg has turned Super 8 into the box office mystery of the summer.

The period sci-fi pic -- directed by Abrams and produced by Spielberg -- officially rolls out Friday in 3,379 theaters, following paid sneaks at 350 locations Thursday, including 240 Imax runs. How it will do this weekend is the subject of heated speculation among insiders.

At the center of the buzz is pre-release tracking, which has been more muted than expected for a film directed by Abrams and produced by Spielberg.

Overall awareness isn't quite where it should be, although there could be a myriad of reasons why. The film has no big stars and is an original story sandwiched between known franchise titles.

At the same time, Super 8 is drawing strong reviews, with critics crediting Abrams for going outside of Hollywood's comfort zone and making a film he calls an homage to the movies he grew up with as a kid, many of them from Spielberg and Amblin Entertainment.

Set in 1979, Super 8 tells the story of a group of kids who are filming a home movie when there's a violent train crash. When unexplained events start to threaten their town, they begin to suspect something inhuman escaped from the train. The film stars Joel Courtney, Elle Fanning, Kyle Chandler, Ryan Lee, Riley Griffiths, Gabriel Basso and Zach Mills.

Paramount maintains that Super 8 doesn't need a big opening, since it cost $50 million to produce, far less than other summer studio films. The studio is predicting an opening in the $25 million to $30 million range.

Still, Paramount has been doing everything it can to ratchet up interest. It teamed with Twitter to host Thursday's paid previews and on Wednesday night held free sneaks in 11 cities in partnership with key websites.

Tracking has improved for two demos -- females under the age of 25 and males under the age of 25. The strongest quadrant continues to be males over the age of 25.

Paramount is deft at tweaking, or shifting, its marketing campaigns, if needed. And the studio's vital marketing ability came into view with the runaway success of the micro-budgeted Paranormal Activity.

The weekend box office race could be close between Super 8 and 20th Century Fox's holdover X-Men: First Class, which debuted last weekend to $55.1 million. First Class has done strong midweek business, with a cume of $69.9 million through Wednesday.

One other new film enters the market this weekend, Smokewood Entertainment's Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer, based on the bestselling book series and targeting girls ages 6-10.

Relativity Media is distributing the film for Smokewood, Judy Siegel-Mangess and Gary Magness' production company. Their previous credits include Precious.

Judy Moody is expected to gross between $6 million and $10 million...


Adam Markovitz of  EW says Super 8 will win the weekend; But asks by how much?

I will posting my own review of Abrams' newest cinematic effort as well....

No comments:

Post a Comment