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Monday, February 20, 2012

Journey 2 Is A Ghost Buster At The Cineplex

OK--the final box office numbers for the holiday weekend yielding still another surprise--action thriller Safe House was pretty much assured the top spot--romancer The Vow taking 2nd place while Journey 2 upends the comic book film Ghost Rider™: Spirit of Vengeance for 3rd...


Pamela McClintock of THR:

The long Presidents Day weekend saw a trio of strong holdovers -- Safe House, The Vow and Journey 2: The Mysterious Island--top the domestic box office chart in a surprise upset over new entries.

Universal's Safe House, starring Denzel Washington and Ryan Reynolds, was in a tight race with The Vow for much of the four-day weekend, but pulled ahead to grab $28.4 million. The action pic dropped a narrow 40 percent from its opening weekend, and has now grossed $82.6 million domestically.

Overseas, Safe House has now grossed $19.6 million, bringing the movie's worldwide haul to $102.2 million.

From Sony/Screen Gems and Spyglass, The Vow came in No. 2 with an equally pleasing four-day take of $26.6 million. The Rachel McAdams-Channing Tatum romantic drama is already the top grossing Screen Gems title of all time at the domestic box office, cuming $88.5 million in its first 11 days. Dear John, also starring Tatum, was the previous best, cuming $80.1 million domestically.

Just behind The Vow was New Line and Warner Bros' Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, which pulled ahead of Sony's Ghost Rider--Spirit of Vengeance at the 11th hour to take the No. 3 spot with a stellar $26.4 million. Journey 2 continued to do big business overseas as well, where its cume is now $128 million. All in, the sequel has already earned $187.4 million worldwide.

The three holdovers led another strong weekend of moviegoing at the domestic box office, with revenues up 11 percent over Presidents Day weekend last year.

The Ghost Rider sequel, returning Nicolas Cage in the title role, grossed $25.7 million over the four-day holiday, well behind predictions, considering the first Ghost Rider debuted to $52 million over Presidents Day weekend in 2007. Pre-release tracking had suggested Spirit of Vengeance would open closer to $35 million.

Spirit of Vengeance, receiving a tepid C+ CinemaScore, was fueled by males, who made up 61% of the audience. Moviegoers under the age of 25 made up 48 percent of the audience. Sony and Hyde Park Entertainment co-produced and co-financed the sequel, which cost $57 million to produce.

Reese Witherspoon-Chris Pine-Tom Hardy romantic action-comedy This Means War debuted at No. 5 for the four-day weekend, grossing an estimated $20.4 million. Including previews, the 20th Century Fox film has earned $22 million domestically.

This Means War came in ahead of expectations, and earned an A- CinemaScore. Females fueled the film, making up 65 percent of the audience, while 60 percent of those buying tickets were over the age of 25. The production budget was $65 million.

This Means War showed impressive strength overseas, where it debuted to $11 million from only 16 markets, opening No. 1 in Russia, Australia and Hong Kong.

The fourth new film of the weekend was Disney's family film The Secret World of Arrietty, from acclaimed Japanese animation house Studio Ghibli. Secret Life of Arrietty came in No. 8, posting a solid four-day gross of $8.1 million.

At the awards box office, Fox Searchlight's The Descendants and The Weinstein Co.'s The Artist held in well, coming in No. 11 and No. 12, respectively.

The Descendants grossed $3.5 million from 1,243 theaters for a domestic cume of $75.6 million, while The Artist -- an Oscar frontrunner -- grossed $3 million from only 808 theaters for a domestic cume of $28.1 million.


Top 10 Presidents Day Box Office, Feb. 17-Feb. 20

1. Safe House (2), Universal/3,121, $28.4 million, $82.6 million

2. The Vow (2), Screen Gems, Spyglass/2,958, $26.6 million, $88.5 million

3. Journey 2 (2), New Line, Warner /3,500, $26.4 million, $59.5 million

4. Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance (1), Sony/3,174, $25.7 million, $25.7 million

5. This Means War (1), Fox/3,189, $20.4 million, $22 million

6. Star Wars: Episode I--The Phantom Menace (2), Fox/ 2,655, $10.2 million, $36 million

7. Chronicle (3), Fox/2,556, $9.2 million, $52.7 million

8. The Secret Life of Arrietty (1), Disney, Studio Ghibli/1,522, $8.1 million, $8.1 million

9. The Woman in Black (3), CBS Films/2,559, $7.8 million, $46.4 million

10. The Grey (4), Open Road Films/2,107, $3.8 million, $48.7 million

Next: Paul Rudd and Jennifer Aniston go on a Wanderlust; The Navy SEALs  showcase an "Act Of Valor"; Amanda Seyfried is convinced her sister is Gone; Tyler Perry does Good Deeds....And I'm kinda curious to see what becomes of 2010's "Tomorrow, When the War Began", the Australian version of "Red Dawn" as directed by Stuart Beattie

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