North American box office: zombies rule the landAnd so do decade-old movies about playthings: 1. Zombieland: $24.7 million (NEW) actual numbers, not estimates What does it mean when a rerelease of an old film -- well, two old films -- does better than most of the new stuff? Could it be that the new stuff is mostly crap... or that the new stuff that isn’t crap isn’t getting the marketing it deserves? Zombieland absolutely isn’t crap, and it’s great that it did well its first weekend out -- especially since, as Box Office Mojo notes, horror comedy rarely does well at the box office. It’s great to see that the mad-science comedy Cloudy is holding strong. And while I haven’t yet seen Surrogates, the general tenor of reviews is that it ain’t so hot, so it probably earned its big drop. But why did the smart, wicked Lying fare so poorly? Why did the fantastic and exciting Whip It clock in only at No. 6, with takings of only $4.7 million? These movies deserve to do better, deserve to be seen by more people. At least people flocked to the few theaters -- six -- at which they could see the Coen Brothers’ latest conundrum, A Serious Man: it opened to a whopping per-screen average of $41,890. Overall, though, business was down six percent over the same weekend last year. People generally aren’t happy with what Hollywood is giving us of late. You think Hollywood would catch on, at some point. But they never seem to. The crap movies flop, but so do too many of the good ones. How long can this continue? [numbers via Box Office Mojo] Disqus commentsblog comments powered by Disqus |
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Tue Oct 06 09, 12:06PM categories: movie buzz permalink 3 pre-Disqus comments Disqus comments tip jarshare
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Box Office Mojo Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs Coen Brothers Invention of Lying Serious Man Surrogates Toy Story Toy Story 2 Whip It Zombieland related· North American box office: ‘Couples Retreat’ to paradise · U.K. box office: ‘Fame’ hangs strong · North American box office: ‘Cloudy’ still sunny · October 2: DVD alternatives to this weekend’s multiplex offerings · question of the day: What movie are you most looking forward to in October? · my week at the movies: ‘Love Happens,’ ‘A Serious Man,’ ‘The Invention of Lying,’ ‘I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell’ · U.K. box office: ‘Fame’ opens big · question of the day: What movie are you most looking forward to in September? · U.K. box office: ‘Up’ keeps floating along · U.K. box office: ‘Up’ opens in the stratosphere bloggyprevious post: trailer break: ‘The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus’ next post: watch it: “Sesame Street: Mad Men” |









pre-Disqus comments
posted by RogerBW (Wed Oct 07 09, 6:24AM)
Personally I find Gervais so unpleasant to watch that I don't bother to see anything he's in, never mind that he's starring in; clearly many other people don't feel that way.
posted by Tonio Kruger (Wed Oct 07 09, 12:01PM)
Also, a lot of people living in the US right now are either unemployed, underemployed or living in fear of unemployment--a condition that doesn't exactly make you to go to the movie theatre and take a chance on the average new release.
As it is, I've been watching more movies in the past two months through library rentals and DVDs that I or friends already own than I have seen at the movie theatre during the past year.
And compared to the rest of my siblings, I'm a frequent movie-goer.
posted by Andrew (Wed Oct 07 09, 12:12PM)
In fairness, those two old films being rereleased are two movies that belong very high on any sane person's list of greatest movies of all time.