Sunday
Apr182010

Box Office Report - April 16-18

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1. How to Train Your Dragon - $20 million

2. Kick-Ass - $19.7 million

3. Date Night - $17.3 million

4. Death at a Funeral - $17 million

5. Clash of the Titans - $15.7 million

6. The Last Song - $5.8 million

7. Tyler Perry's Why Did I Get Married Too? - $4.1 million

8. Hot Tub Time Machine - $3.5 million

9. Alice in Wonderland - $3.5 million

10. The Bounty Hunter - $3.2 million

Oh boy, it looks like another too-close-to-call weekend at the box office.  Actuals will come in tomorrow, but for the moment, it looks like Dreamworks' How to Train Your Dragon, in its fourth weekend, astonishingly managed to fly past this weekend's new releases and land back at the #1 spot, dropping only 19% from last weekend with a total of $20 million.  With a domestic total so far of $158.6 million (and a worldwide total of $320 million), this looks to be riding its great reviews and strong word-of-mouth straight into the summer movie season.

But even if it does climb back into the #1 spot tomorrow, Lionsgate's Kick-Ass seems to have gotten, well, its ass kicked.  The Matthew Vaughn superhero film opened with a disapointing $19.7 million, which was well below estimates for the weekend.   However, Kick-Ass has shown strong box office momentum after less-than-stellar openings overseas, so it's likely that will be the case here as well.  With an estimated budget of around $30 million, the movie is ultimately going to be a hit, even if it doesn't break box office records.

Date Night, last weekend's almost-winner for the #1 spot, dropped just 31%, making $17.3 mllion and bringing its total to $49.2 million.  It's in the #3 spot for now, however...

Death at a Funeral, this weekend's other new release, finished the weekend with an estimated $17 million.  So it's possible that it could switch places with Date Night once the actuals come in.  Like Kick-Ass, Death at a Funeral also came in below expectations, but it did have the highest per-screen average ($6933) out of any other movie in the top 10.

All of the new releases proved to be too much for Clash of the Titans, which dropped 41% to fifth place with $15.7 million.  It's now at a domestic total of $133 million. 

Not too many surprises in the rest of the top 10.  Alice in Wonderland is now at a worldwide total of $827 million, making it the biggest film of the year so far (well, at least until Iron Man 2 hits theaters).

Avatar, which for some reason got a re-release at select AMC theaters this weekend, added another $1.1 million to the gazillions it already made the first time around (which was what, last week?).  

So will Kick-Ass fight its way into first place?  Stay tuned...

Friday
Apr162010

Marveling At The Past - X-Men (2000)

“We’re not what you think………not all of us”

Against all odds, it worked; that just about sums up how most of us feel about the first, and long time coming, major film adaptation of a Marvel comic book property.  Having been ten years since its release, the film’s strengths and weaknesses have been discussed to death and the only reason I will dredge any of them up again is to provide some positive solutions.

Looking back on the film, the biggest compliment I can give the filmmakers is that they were able to make an X-Men movie on a piddling budget of $75 million.  That won’t even buy you a summer comedy blockbuster these days (see ‘Year One’).  You could pitch a completely different film, on a more epic scale, that may serve as a better X-Men part 1; one where you see multiple mutants fighting on screen every ten minutes, with a team line-up including Beast or Gambit, or where Magneto is powerful enough to hijack nuclear warheads from a submarine and hurl them right back at Washington.  I hope come the inevitable reboot that we get exactly that kind of picture.  But right now I cannot suggest such things would have improved Bryan Singer’s film when he was able to make a good film out of a limited budget and rushed production schedule.

The basic spine of the film is the perfect introduction to the X-Men world and, with a little push in certain areas, it could have avoided the TV pilot mentality which brings it below the quality level of its immediate sequel.  Watching the movie you feel that introducing the world, the characters, and sowing the seeds of plot lines that were intended to be developed in future films was the primary focus.  There is nothing wrong with having the intention to make multiple films but each one must stand on its own legs.  Marvel movies such as ‘Spider-man’ and ‘Iron Man’ don’t suffer from this problem because their primary goal is to tell a singular story with an ending that is satisfying enough that the audience is not obligated to see the second film.  Of course having to only deal with one character makes this considerably easier.  But then again, X-Men wisely did the same thing by putting the focus solely on Logan and Rogue, and how their lives are irrevocably changed by being dragged into the conflict between homosapiens and homosuperior.

But the real conflict is not between two races, but between two men divided by totally separate ideologies and the pawns they use to achieve their goals.  Perhaps you don’t believe that Professor Xavier is anything other than the noble and gentle leader of the X-Men but that hardly makes for the most interesting of characters.  Both Singer and Brett Ratner, I believe, understood that a fight to live in a world free of intolerance and hatred is still a fight and requires tough decisions to be made.  Xavier, brilliant man as he is, cannot be a selfless individual who always make the right and inarguable choice.  The chess scene at the end of the film between him and Magneto clearly suggests that they are both playing the same game, but from different sides of the board.  Logan and Rogue are just the pieces that were moved around.  That is what the first X-Men film is really about.

I feel the scene which introduces them at the senate hearing could have emphasized this a lot more.  In a sequence which was deleted from the film, Jean Grey’s lecture on mutation and subsequent confrontation with Senator Kelly ends with her losing control of her powers, using her telekinetic powers to try and take his confidential document of unidentified mutant files.  Without that scene it isn’t clear for the uninitiated until later that Jean is a mutant herself but having her exposed on the senate floor to people who thought she was just a homosapien campaigner would have left a much stronger impression.  Jean’s credibility, being a mutant defending mutants, is destroyed.  Kelly’s position on the threat they pose is strengthened and both Xavier and Magneto, watching it happen, realize this is the turning point.  That moment exists in the film where Magneto leaves the hearing amid the cheers of mutant haters, ready to go to work and Xavier follows him, pleading with his old friend not to go down this path.  The battle they have been dreading to fight but inevitably preparing for is about to begin.

The only element missing is an actual physical confrontation between the two characters but I cannot really complain about that.  The filmmakers were drive into a corner by the fact that Xavier is too powerful to be brought into the climax of the film, given that he can simply control the minds of Magneto’s Brotherhood and end most of the conflict right there.  Still, it would just be dramatically satisfying to run the whole gamut of their relationship and bring it to its logical conclusion; two friends who started with the best of intentions, driven by the need to protect their own kind, and being forced by to kill each other because neither is able to back down from their point of view.

Looking at what we get in the film, there is a certain pathos to seeing Xavier’s students (his children if you like) going into battle against the odds and without his protection but determined to fight and die for his beliefs.  Which brings us nicely to Cyclops and Storm; woefully underdeveloped characters in a sea of otherwise perfectly nailed ones.  Looking back, the reasons are obvious.  Cyclops is supposed to be the leader of the X-Men but his only function in the film is to create a love triangle between Jean, Logan and himself.  Storm just does not contribute in any way. 

I think what bugs me about Cyclops is the scene where he confronts Logan about Jean.  Logan asks if Cyclops is going to tell him to stay away from her.  Cyclops, quite rightly, says that because she is his girl, he doesn’t have to…and then tells Logan to stay away from her anyway.  It’s probably meant to be a humorous moment but it really hurts the character.  I can understand why, for most of the film, we don’t see Cyclops in a leadership role as Xavier fulfills it and the X-Men have not yet been into battle.  Once Xavier is injured in the third act, Cyclops steps up to the role but still doesn’t actually get to kick any ass.  Once the team enters Liberty Island, Logan takes on Mystique and Toad manages to get the drop on the other three by himself.  Cyclops’ only contribution to the action is to get kicked across the room and zap some slime from Jean’s face.  Instead of Storm facing off against Toad I would have much preferred to see Cyclops unleashed in a fury of optic blasts determined to nail the scum that would dare to hurt the one he loves.

Most of my problems with Storm stems from the fact that the role was cast too young.  I’ve always seen Storm as the wisdom, experience and strength of the actual team; the one who never shows weakness.  In the film, she is just a blank space.  And rather than showing just physical strength, her defining scene could have been the one she shares with the dying and recently mutated Senator Kelly.  Given the confrontation she shared with him near the start of the film, Jean deliberately leaves Kelly to his fate, hinting at that malicious side that lies beneath the surface, waiting to be unleashed as the Phoenix in future films.  It is Storm who would have the courage to look the living embodiment of bigotry in the eye and be at his side as he endures the living nightmare Magneto has inflicted on him.  She chooses to help him, rather than being asked to.

The final element to address is the final five minutes of the film, which is what really cements that TV pilot feeling you leave the movie with.  Even though Magneto’s plan is foiled, Mystique escapes to impersonate Senator Kelly and literally walks off the screen into film two while the issue of the Mutant Registration Act is relegated to the background as if it were never an important plot point when all it required as a stronger end scene to make it work; a final confrontation at the senate where the senator publicly retracts his stance.  And rather than the X-Men finding out that Kelly is Mystique by pausing the television, Jean literally looks into the senator’s eyes and realizes what is really going on.  A terrorist mutant is now in a major position of power and there is nothing the X-Men can do about it.

But while I may have issue with the details, the basic brush strokes of the film lead so brilliantly into the second film and X2 was the biggest wet dream a fan could ask for.  But now isn’t the time to discuss that.  Next week I will be looking at a film which had a more problems, for me, than any X-Men movie; 'Blade II'.  See you next week.

Friday
Apr162010

Chris Rock Interview on Jimmy Fallon

Chris is out promoting his new film 'Death At A Funeral' . The fact is he doesn't need to be promoting anything to keep you laughing. Chris literally cracks you up from the beginning of the interview to the end.

In addition to talking about 'Death At A Funeral' he also talks about producing the new Richard Pryor movie starring Marlon Wayans.
 

Death at a Funeral Opens tonight.

 

Friday
Apr162010

Paramount Brings Back 'Mighty Mouse'

The L.A. Times has a new story about the plans for Paramount Pictures and its Nickelodeon Movies imprint to bring the classic Saturday morning cartoon character Mighty Mouse to the big screen.

The studio is currently looking for a new writer and director in hopes of moving the long-gestating project forward. The success 20th Century Fox had with the "Alvin and the Chipmunks" movies is certainly a strong motivator for bringing back the superhero mouse whose name and theme song is almost more known than the actual cartoons in large part thanks to the late Andy Kaufman. The Terrytoons cartoon ran from the '50s through the '80s, creating a similar sense of nostalgia among those over thirty that should be easy to capitalize on with the right movie. It's unclear whether the project will be fully animated or a combination of live action and animation such as the "Alvin" movies, the "Stuart Little" or "Garfield" movies or Disney's failed attempt to bring Underdog to the screen.

You can read the full article over at the L.A. Times, and let us know whether you have any interest either way on seeing the animated rodent superhero back on the screen in any format.

 

 
Friday
Apr162010

DC's Geoff Johns Talks 'Green Lantern'

DC Entertainment Chief Creative Officer Geoff Johns answered fans' questions at Comic Book Resources and he was first asked about a possible DC movie slate announcement:

I can't get into the exact DC slate right now, but we're all working heavily on what that is with Warner Bros. and there will be news forthcoming. But, you can bet there is going to be a lot more than there is right now.

While he didn't reveal much there, Johns did talk more about his visits to the Green Lantern set in New Orleans:

The movie looks fantastic. I'm heading back down to New Orleans in a few weeks, but I just watched the Abin Sur/Hal Jordan dailies, and it's amazing seeing that ring passed to Hal in live action. Abin Sur looks kick-ass.

They did such a great job. They've got Grant [Major] as a production designer. He's from "Lord of the Rings," and the visuals on this film are nothing like you could imagine. It's definitely a Green Lantern fan's dream. For me, it's kind of insane to see this stuff come to life.

And Ryan Reynolds is a perfect Hal Jordan. He brings a lot of humor to it, but he also has the humanity that Hal has. And a little bit of the arrogance, so it's a great match.

Directed by Martin Campbell, Green Lantern hits 3D and 2D theaters on June 17, 2011.

Friday
Apr162010

New Trailer 'Grown Ups'

Columbia Pictures has debuted the new trailer online for Grown Ups, starring Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock, Rob Schneider, David Spade, Salma Hayek, Maria Bello and Maya Rudolph.

The Dennis Dugan-directed comedy, opening June 25, is about five friends and former teammates who reunite years later to honor the passing of their childhood basketball coach. With their wives and kids in tow, they spend the Fourth of July holiday weekend together at the lake house where they celebrated their championship years earlier. Picking up where they left off, they discover why growing older doesn't mean growing up.





This looks a lot funnier then the first couple trailers that were released, but I'm no still not overly impressed. I was one of few people that actually liked 'Funny People', but this looks nothing near in the same vein as that, I'm not sure what this is. Hopefully Sandler is able to be funny like he once was, again.

Friday
Apr162010

Box Office Predictions April 16-18

Running a little behind with the weekend predictions, I forgot to post them yesterday. If this is your first time to TMT or your just coming back after a while, the box office predictions are posted every Thursday and then the estimates in Sunday, on Monday the actual numbers are posted and we see how I did.

The following is my box office predictions for April 16-18 2010

1. Kick-Ass (Lionsgate) - $33.2 million

2. Death at a Funeral (Sony/Screen Gems) - $25 million

3. How to Train Your Dragon (DreamWorks Animation/Paramount) - $18 million

4. Date Night (20th Century Fox) - $14.5 million

5. Clash of the Titans (Warner Bros.) - $11.5 million

6. The Last Song (Walt Disney Pictures) - $6.2 million

7. Tyler Perry's Why Did I Get Married Too? (Lionsgate) - $5 million

8. Hot Tub Time Machine (MGM) - $3.2 million

9. Alice in Wonderland (Walt Disney Pictures) - $2.7 million

10. The Bounty Hunter (Sony) - $2.2 million

Check back on Sunday for the estimates , and again on Monday for the actual numbers and see how I did.

Thursday
Apr152010

Disney's Redeeming Apprentice

 

 

When I first heard this movie was being made and with Nic Cage in it as well, I almost dismissed it. More magic, sorcery and fantasy is just what we need. I assumed very little about this movie would excite me. Then the trailer was released, and it was full of great sequences and my opinion immediately changed.  
 
Comingsoon.net has released the teaser poster for Disneys' "The Sorcerer's Apprentice". The poster reveals just enough to surround itself with good mystery if you are glancing at it for the first time in theatres.

I believe this one is shaping up to be a great boost for Disney in the live action department, as their latest installment of the hugely popular "Pirates" series, left bitter thoughts in the minds of critics and fans a like.

Also another note of interest, Nic Cages hair in this one looks believable and fits his often mundane face quite well.

Thursday
Apr152010

Because You Asked For It, Avatar Returns

Apparently the studio executives at Fox weren't pleased with the box office numbers of Avatar and they've struck a deal with AMC Theatres for a limited two day re-release of the phenomenon.
 
If you couldn't wait until Thursday to own the movie then here's your chance to pay the newly raised 3-D prices that you missed the first time around. Friday and Saturday will have 61 theatres in 29 cities showing the movie that wowed audiences back in December.

This is the first news I've heard about the re-release so I'm unsure what other moviegoers are thinking on the release. I'll just wait for the Blu-ray and be amazed at the clarity on tv my as I rest a plate on my stomach, downing a cold one.

Thursday
Apr152010

How to Succeed After "Harry"?

So anyone wondering what kind of careers the Harry Potter kids will have once the final film in the series wraps up this year has at least one answer:  Playbill is reporting that Harry himself, Daniel Radcliffe, will be returning to the New York stage in a revival of the musical How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying in 2011.

Radcliffe made his Broadway debut two years ago in Equus (a role he also played in London), and unlike that play, which required his character to get naked and blind horses on stage, he will be tackling something possibly even scarier this time:  singing and dancing.

How to Succeed is the story of a window washer, J. Pierrepont Finch, who with the help of the book "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," learns to sneak his way up the corporate ladder of the World Wide Wickets Corporation in New York City.  

The show has a pretty impressive background - it opened on Broadway in 1961, winning seven Tony Awards including Best Musical and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.  It was revived on Broadway in 1995 starring Matthew Broderick, who won a Tony for his performance.

A private reading of the show was held at Playrights Horizons in New York back in December, starring Radcliffe, David Hyde-Pierce and Michael Urie (Ugly Betty), and according to this report from someone in attendance - Radcliffe's singing & dancing skills are just fine.   He even got a hug from Jo Loesser, the widow of How to Succeed's composer, Frank Loesser, when the reading was over. 

The only production I've ever seen of this show was a high school production.  At the time, I thought it seemed a bit dated.  But the 1995 revival was supposed to be really good, and the show definitely has a Mad Men-type feel to it (in fact, the show's original J. Pierrepont Finch, Robert Morse, is currently one of the stars of Mad Men) - so it shouldn't have much of a problem connecting with an audience now, especially with Harry Potter in the lead role. 

Since I'm still kicking myself for missing Radcliffe's performance in Equus, which I heard was fantastic, I will definitely be checking this out.   As a theater geek, I always find that a lot of actors are at their most awesome when performing on stage, so I can't miss it.