DELLAMORTE'S BOX OFFICE WRAP UP 10/3/08
- By Andre Dellamorte
- Published 10/5/2008
- News
| What-chu | What-chu | What-chu | Want? | |
| 1 | Beverly Hills Chihuahua | $29,000,000 | $9,020 | $29,000,000 |
| 2 | Eagle Eye | $17,700,000 (-39.3%) | $5,034 | $54,605,000 |
| 3 | Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist | $12,000,000 | $4,957 | $12,000,000 |
| 4 | Nights in Rodanthe | $7,355,000 (-45.2%) | $2,722 | $25,075,000 |
| 5 | Appaloosa | $5,015,000 (+3,321.6%) | $4,799 | $5,570,000 |
| 6 | Lakeview Terrace | $4,500,000 (-35.4%) | $1,748 | $32,140,000 |
| 7 | Burn After Reading | $4,083,000 (-34.1%) | $1,703 | $51,641,000 |
| 8 | Fireproof | $4,069,000 (-40.5%) | $4,776 | $12,491,000 |
| 9 | An American Carol | $3,810,000 | $2,325 | $3,810,000 |
| 10 | Religulous | $3,500,000 | $6,972 | $3,519,000 |
This just in: These two droids. Both are hard working, and will serve you well.
There is an excuse to be made for the high ranking of Beverly Hills Chihuahua. Parents know what talking dog movies are - hell the entire culture has been train on helpful or smart animals for over fify years. And though peanut butter has been replaced with CGI, the appeal of it is not unfamiliar to audiences. Mixed with Disney's likely very smart advertising campaign, and the lack of other children's entertainments (other than Lakeview Terrace) and Disney's got a real shot at getting this picture to a nine digit payoff if it can do business between now and Madagascar 2. And if High School Musical 2 doesn't step on it. Or jump on it. Dunno, it's a musical, right? What? It's the third one? And none of these went theatrical before? Crazy times.
Holding up second was Eagle Eye. Though by the nature of the cast and premise, this looks to be more expensive than Disturbia (which surely turned a quick nickel for Dreamworks), but though the film will likely not be as remunerative, it's undeniably successful on its September terms. Disturbia played long, though, and this.. not so much. In the end it should get to about the same numbers as Disturbia, but it opened bigger, which does say something. And that's that Mutt Jones Jr. is going places, like to the Dreamworks commissary for more pudding.
Nick and Norah's Infinite Title opened. Since Michael Cera is probably the only one who got paid, if this film gets to $30-$40 it's going to be considered a win. Cera is currently more respected than loved, whch means he'll work, but after this loses a little credit for Superbad and Juno. N&N's did not look like a winner so there's that, and Sony did not give it the push those more successful films got. But N&N's does feature what Diablo Cody described as "Kat Dennings' perfect, pillowy cleavage" so Dennings might also have a following that leads to starbursts. I guess Diablo's saying she'd like to take a nap on Kat Dennings. Who wouldn't? I would like that to become a qualification for attractiveness. "Person you'd most like to sleep on."
If you didn't see that as a direct transition to Nights in Rodanthe, well, then call me Josh Brolin. Some of you may find that sexist, but I will say this: I think Diane Lane is more qualified to be vice president than Sarah Palin. The film doesn't suggest a level-out yet, so $40 may be as high as it goes. If these films are made reasonably, then it will likely turn a profit, if not now, then through DVD.
Appaloosa is an expansion run, but not an academy picture. Actually, what it is is a leftover New Line picture. Warner Brothers - on one hand - has to go through the motions, but on the other would probably prefer that it didn't make money. And Lakeview Terrace is looking to double its budget. Yay it! Burn After Reading found it's audience, and should get a little over $60, which is a win all around. Fireproof was supposedly very cheap, so it should be happy, though it will likely not clear $20, and will start leaving theaters come Thursday night.
But, once again, I've buried the lede. The most interesting story of the week is the $310,000 that separates the weekend grosses of Religulous and An American Carol. both are deeply partisan efforts that mostly preach to the choir, and may have attracted some people who were morally opposed to the message just to see what the opposition were saying. That's a thin line between the two, and you might suggest there's a taint difference in gross. Poland talks about the "geek eight," which I find too amorphous, but perhaps there's a "Partisan Four." Carol gets the gross win, but Religulous, wins the per-screen, which means it will likely be doing better next week and therefore should finish with a bigger total. I had a friend who was desperate to get a torrent of Ben Stein's Expelled but has yet to find one, because the audience who saw the picture didn't think to bootleg it. I bet there's already more torrents for Religulous then Carol. Perhaps that's a victory.
ADDENDUM: Sadness for How to Lose Friends and Alienate People and Blindness, both of which did just over two million and charted out of the top ten. A Simon Pegg-starring rom-com doesn't have the cross appeal to make the Geek eight, while the trailers were so terrible it could be considered anti-advertising, while I guess the blind protests helped steer people away from the latter. Or maybe it was the reviews that couldn't muster up any enthusiasms. Enthusiasms.
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Comments
Comment #1 (Posted by David)
Yeeesh you didn't even mention How to Lose Friends... a true bomb.
Comment #2 (Posted by Boggy)
Nope. theres no torrents for Religuous and it was called Religulous last time i checked.
Comment #3 (Posted by Dellamorte)
It's harder to spell check an intentionally mispelled word.
Comment #4 (Posted by rAt)
Spell check.
Thank you.
Comment #5 (Posted by Jedibobster)
*sigh* Makes you pine for the days when The Dark Knight was pissing all over the charts. Remember them?
Comment #6 (Posted by K-9 Posse's follow-up album)
Shame the lame Chihuahua movie's number one. Highly doubt it will touch a generation like Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey. Or give a kid his first wood like Oh, Heavenly Dog (Thanks Jane Seymour. That Benji was such a rapscallion) At least throw in some sort of Hanks-ian buddy. Or Charles Grodin. Could be worse: An American Carol. if that had succeeded this close to the election...might've shit my pants and run for the hills. (Hey David Zucker-thanks for tainting Top Secret. Dick.)
Comment #7 (Posted by Josh Gravitt)
I think the real story is how Fireproof (a Christian movie), which cost a half a million dollars to make, clobbered Religulous in it's second week. I don't know if Religulous is a wide release or not, but Fireproof was and still is a very limited release.
Comment #8 (Posted by an unknown user)
Religulous had a much stronger per theater than Fireproof. Second highest of the weekend, for what it's worth.
Comment #9 (Posted by Lexx-2)
So An American Carol grossed half of what Fireproof did last weekend. I guess we can credited the American Right with some taste at least...
Comment #10 (Posted by Josh Gravitt)
Yes Religulous did have a higher return this week than Fireproof, but Fireproof had the highest per screen turnout for a limited release, of the year on it's opening weekend, except for that Miley Cyrus concert movie.
Comment #11 (Posted by BobClark feels inside of you!)
Go suckle on Devin, you brown-nosing jackoff.
Comment #12 (Posted by josh ryan)
Nice Untouchables reference at the end there, you baseball bat swingin-mothereffer, you.

