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Entries by Jen Mayhew (556)

Sunday
Oct062013

Weekend Box Office: October 4-6

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  Gravity - $55.6 million

2.  Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 - $21.5 million

3.  Runner Runner - $7.6 million

4.  Prisoners - $5.7 million

5.  Rush - $4.4 million

6.  Don Jon - $4.16 million

7.  Baggage Claim - $4.12 million

8.  Insidious Chapter 2 - $3.8 million

9.  Pulling Strings - $2.5 million

10.  Enough Said - $2.1 million

Let's dispense with the inevitable space puns and get right to the point:  Gravity is a big hit.  With an estimated $55.6 million for the weekend, it becomes October's highest opening weekend and career-best opening weekends for both stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.  That's right...this weekend saw the end of the hilarity that was Clooney's biggest opening weekend being Batman & Robin.  But when you combine the audience appeal of both Bullock and Clooney, along with visuals that need to be seen in IMAX/3D, this is the kind of weekend that should happen for a movie like this.

Meanwhile, Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 remained popular with the family crowd, dropping just 37% to earn another $21.5 million.  The animated sequel has earned $60.6 million domestically so far, and is well on its way to pass $100 million at some point this month.

Speaking of audience appeal, Runner Runner had none.  The epic pairing of Ben Affleck and Justin Timberlake (sarcasm heavily implied) didn't seem to interest audience at all this weekend, sputtering in theaters with just $7.6 million.

Prisoners continues to do well, taking fourth place with $5.7 million, and bringing its domestic total up to $46 million.  Rush, which had a so-so opening last week, dropped a not-so-good 56% in its second weekend, earning only $4.4 million.  Don Jon and Baggage Claim didn't gather too much interest this weekend either, as they virtually tied with about $4 million apiece.

Next weekend sees another Oscar hopeful, Captain Phillips (starring two-time Oscar winner Tom Hanks), as well as Machete Kills, which won't be winning anything at awards time. 

Sunday
Sep292013

Weekend Box Office: September 27-29

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 - $35 million

2.  Prisoners - $11.2 million

3.  Rush - $10.3 million

4.  Baggage Claim - $9.3 million

5.  Don Jon - $9 million

6.  Insidious Chapter 2 - $6.7 million

7.  The Family - $3.6 million

8.  Instructions Not Included - $3.3 million

9.  We're The Millers - $2.8 million

10.  Lee Daniels' The Butler - $2.4 million

It's been a few weeks since we've had any animated fare in theaters, so Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 easily topped the slew of movies for grownups also in theaters this weekend.  The sequel's estimated $35 million this weekend tops the $30 million that the original film opened with in 2009 and went on to earn $125 million.  Expect pretty much the same from this film, since there aren't many family films opening in the next few weeks. 

The new releases were also no match for Prisoners, which dropped 46% from its first-place opening last weekend to earn $11.2 million, although Ron Howard's Rush came close, opening in wide release this weekend with $10.3 million.  Joseph Gordon-Levitt's directorial debut, Don Jon, opened with a less-impressive $9 million.  Meanwhile, the romantic comedy Baggage Claim managed to find a place in between Rush and Don Jon with $9.3 million.

Metallica fans had fun this weekend, as their 3D/IMAX extravaganza Metallica: Through The Never earned a healthy $1.6 million at 308 IMAX locations.  Instructions Not Included continues to be the success story of the fall so far, earning $3.3 million and becoming the highest-grossing Spanish-language film released in the U.S. 

Next weekend sees another big release in the Oscar hopefuls category, as the George Clooney/Sandra Bullock space thriller Gravity opens in theaters.  Joining is Runner Runner, which is not an Oscar hopeful, but stars future Batman, Ben Affleck. 

Sunday
Sep222013

Weekend Box Office: September 20-22

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  Prisoners - $21.4 million

2.  Insidious Chapter 2 - $14.5 million

3.  The Family - $7 million

4.  Instructions Not Included - $5.7 million

5.  Battle of the Year - $5 million

6.  We're The Millers - $4.6 million

7.  Lee Daniels' The Butler - $4.3 million

8.  Riddick - $3.6 million

9.  The Wizard of Oz (3D/IMAX) - $3 million

10.  Planes - $2.8 million

Audiences chose to be terrified this weekend, as the kidnap drama Prisoners easily won the weekend with an estimated $21.4 million.  That's an impressive start, especially for an R-rated film that clocks in at a relentless 2-1/2 hours.  It's also a great opening for Hugh Jackman in a non-Wolverine starring role (I suspect there will be more and more of these to come), and Jake Gyllenhaal, whose awesomeness sadly doesn't always translate to great box office. 

In second place was Insidious Chapter 2, which held on well for a second weekend, and earned $14.5 million.  The sequel has earned $60 million domestically, which outgrosses the original Insidious film - and keep in mind, it only had a reported budget of $5 million.  So expect plenty of sequels from here on out.

The Family, which didn't particularly impress last weekend, didn't do much differently this weekend, earning another $7 million.  The news was better for the Spanish-language hit Instructions Not Included which added another 45 theaters and earned an impressive $5.7 million. 

Any hopes that Battle of the Year would be the next Step-Up series were squashed this weekend, as that tanked this weekend with $5 million.  And am I the only Lost fan who's sad that this is the only movie we've seen Josh Holloway star in?  C'mon, Hollywood...Sawyer deserves better. 

Someone may have dropped a house on the IMAX screens this weekend, as the IMAX/3D re-release of The Wizard of Oz mustered only $3 million. 

In limited release, Enough Said, which features James Gandolfini in one of his final roles, did extremely well, earning $240,000 at just four theaters nationwide.  Ron Howard's Rush earned $200,000 in only five theaters, and opens wide next weekend.

Joining Rush next weekend will be the animated sequel Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2, and the romantic comedy Don Jon

Sunday
Sep152013

Weekend Box Office: September 13-15

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  Insidious Chapter 2 - $41 million

2.  The Family - $14.5 million

3.  Riddick - $7.5 million

4.  Lee Daniels' The Butler - $5.8 million

5.  We're The Millers - $5.4 million

6.  Instructions Not Included - $4.2 million

7.  Planes - $3 million

8.  One Direction: This Is Us - $2.5 million

9.  Elysium - $2 million

10.  Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters - $1.8 million

Summer is over and the Halloween decorations are going up, so folks were in the mood for a horror film this weekend, as Insidious Chapter 2 blew away expectations with an estimated $41 million.  The sequel earned three times the opening weekend of the first Insidious film (that opened with $13.3 million in 2010), and with a budget reported at around $5 million, its undisputably a huge hit.

Also opening this weekend was the mob comedy The Family, which opened with a decent $14.5 million.  Nothing earth-shattering, but not a flop either.  Riddick, which floundered even first place last weekend, dropped more than 60% in its second weekend and earned just $7.5 million. 

Lee Daniels' The Butler earned another $5.8 million this weekend, and is expected to pass $100 million domestically today.  We're the Millers kept going strong, earning another $5.4 million to bring its domestic total to $131 million.  Spanish-language success story Instructions Not Included continues to do well, earning $4.2 million.

Next weekend brings the kidnapping drama Prisoners, and James Gandolfini's final film, Enough Said.

Monday
Sep022013

Holiday Weekend Box Office: August 30 - September 2

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  Lee Daniels' The Butler - $20 million

2.  One Direction: This Is Us - $18 million

3.  We're The Millers - $15.9 million

4.  Planes - $10.6 million

5.  Instructions Not Included - $10 million

6.  Elysium - $8.3 million

7.  The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones - $6.8 million

8.  Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters - $6 million

9.  Getaway - $5.5 million

10.  Blue Jasmine - $5.3 million

Summer took its last gasp at the box office this Labor Day weekend - its been gasping all summer, actually - and Lee Daniels' The Butler managed to take the 4-day holiday weekend with an estimated $20 million.  That's its third weekend in first place (although those One Direction kids took the regular 3-day weekend), and the drama has now grossed $79 million domestically, and should cross the $100 million mark as we head right into awards season. 

Now, those tween screams you may have heard while you were watching The Butler most definitely came from screenings of One Direction: This Is Us.  The British pop sensation did just fine with its intended audience this weekend, eaning $18 million over the holiday. 

But the big success of the weekend came from the Spanish-language film Instructions Not Included, which earned a whopping $10 million in less than 350 theaters, landing in a fifth-place spot on the weekend's top ten.  That is pretty damn fantastic.

Not so fantastic was the car chase thriller Getaway, whose positively dreadful reviews drove away all of the potential audience.  It sputtered with $5.5 million in ninth place this weekend.

If its any kind of indication what kind of summer this has been at the box office, World War Z, which was predicted to be one of the summer's biggest flops, managed to cross $200 million domestically, thanks to a double-bill re-release with Star Trek Into Darkness this weekend.  Go figure.

We're The Millers also continues to do well, crossing the $100 million mark over the holiday with $15.9 million.  It's been a great summer for R-rated comedies, with The Heat ($157 million), and This Is The End ($96 million) also proving popular with audiences.

And with that, summer movie season 2013 comes to a close.  Most would agree, not a moment too soon.  We're not done with superheroes and blockbusters yet, as Thor: The Dark World, and the latest installments of The Hobbit and The Hunger Games will still be hitting the multiplexes this year.  But as festival season is kicking off, we've got lots of good grown-up stuff (Gravity, 12 Years a Slave, Prisoners, The Monuments Men, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, to name a few) opening in theaters over the next few months, which is shaping up to be pretty fantastic, so we're looking forward to it.

Sunday
Aug252013

Weekend Box Office: August 23-25

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  Lee Daniels' The Butler -  $17 million

2.  We're The Millers - $13.5 million

3.  The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones - $9.3 million

4.  The World's End - $8.9 million

5.  Planes - $8.5 million

6.  Elysium - $7.1 million

7.  You're Next - $7 million

8.  Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters - $5.2 million

9.  Blue Jasmine - $4.3 million

10.  Kick-Ass 2 - $4.2 million

A bunch of new releases this weekend could not move Lee Daniels' The Butler and We're The Millers off of there respective first and second place spots from last week.  In its second weekend, The Butler dropped a mere 30% from its $24 million opening last week, earning an estimated $17 million.  The film has turned out to be quite the late-summer hit, having earned $52 million domestically so far.  Audiences looking for laughs continued to find it with We're The Millers, which now has $100 million in its sights with another $13.5 million this weekend.   

The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones, is not going to be the next Twilight.  The adaptation of the popular young adult book series has earned a weak $14 million since opening last Friday, and could only muster a third place finish for the weekend.  Meanwhile, The World's End, the finale to director Edgar Wright's Cornetto Trilogy, opened pretty well with $8.9 million.  That's the best opening for the trilogy (previous films being Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz), although it opened in more theaters than either of those films did.

The last new release this weekend was the horror thriller You're Next.  Although horror films usually do well on opening weekends (and are pretty much forgotten after that), this one didn't quite have that kind of pull this weekend, landing in seventh place with just $7 million. 

Summer movie season officially comes to a close next weekend, as the Labor Day holiday weekend brings us the Riddick sequel no one really asked for, the Ethan Hawke action thriller Getaway, and...you know you can't wait for it: One Direction: This Is Us.  Then, we're on to fall movie season!

Sunday
Aug112013

Weekend Box Office: August 9-11

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  Elysium - $30.4 million

2.  We're The Millers - $26.5 million

3.  Planes - $22.5 million

4.  Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters - $14.6 million

5.  2 Guns - $11.1 million

6.  The Smurfs 2 - $9.5 million

7.  The Wolverine - $8 million

8.  The Conjuring - $6.7 million

9.  Despicable Me 2 - $5.7 million

10.  Grown Ups 2 - $3.7 million

Lots of new releases this weekend, but there could only be one winner for first place.  That was Elysium, which opened with a decent-but-not-spectacular $30.5 million.  There may be some audience fatigue from all of the post-apocalyptic dystopian future-themed movies we've already had this year (Oblivion, After Earth, and Pacific Rim), and Elysium's R-rating certainly didn't help get the younger crowds in.  It also opened below director Neil Blomkamp's previous film, District 9, which opened with $37 million in 2009.  That movie wound up earning $115 domestically and was even nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars that year, but Elysium doesn't seem headed on the same trajectory at this point. 

Audiences desperate for a comedy that wasn't Grown Ups 2 were happy with We're The Millers, which has earned $38 million since opening on Wednesday.  That was a great start, and the "A-" Cinemascore means folks seem to like it, so it should keep doing steady business as the summer winds down.

On a similar note, families desperate for a kids' film that wasn't The Smurfs 2 were pleased with Disney's Planes, the animated movie that isn't from Pixar, but sort of looks like Cars with planes.  While its $22.5 million isn't anywhere in the neighborhood of a Pixar film, it did well enough for a film that was originally intended to go straight to video. 

Last, but not least in new releases was Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters, which just didn't garner much attention at all.  Its $14.6 million is about half of what the previous Percy Jackson film opened with, and after also opening last Wednesday, the film has only earned about $23.5 million.

All of these new releases meant that the holdovers were pretty much shellacked this weekend.  Last week's champ, 2 Guns, dropped nearly 60% and earned just $11.1 million.  The Wolverine lost most of its 3D shows and fell all the way to seventh place with $8 million.  The Smurfs 2, which underwhelmed last weekend, stabilized a bit with $9.5 million, but still isn't likely to catch up to the first film, which earned $142 million. 

In limited release, Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine has been doing great business, earning $2.4 million in just 116 theaters.

Next weekend, we have our last superhero film of the summer, Kick-Ass 2, the Steve Jobs biopic Jobs, the action thriller Paranoia, and Lee Daniels' The Butler, which should start getting the awards watch going as we head into fall.

Sunday
Aug042013

Weekend Box Office: August 2-4

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  2 Guns - $27.3 million

2.  The Wolverine - $21.7 million

3.  The Smurfs 2 - $18.2 million

4.  The Conjuring - $13.6 million

5.  Despicable Me 2 - $10.3 million

6.  Grown Ups 2 - $8.1 million

7.  Turbo - $6.4 million

8.  Red 2 - $5.6 million

9.  The Heat - $4.7 million

10.  Pacific Rim - $4.5 million

Action won out over Smurfs during a relatively quiet weekend at the box office, with 2 Guns taking in a decent-but-not-spectacular $27.3 million.  Tracking and the always-reliable Denzel Washington in the lead saw the action thriller possibly opening over $30 million, but after a strong start on Friday, business slowed for the rest of the weekend.  Still, it's a respectable start, and it's Washington's fifth-best opening weekend.

Falling to second-place is The Wolverine, which earned an estimated $21.7 million.  That's a 59% drop from its underwhelming opening last week, but a much better second weekend drop than the much-maligned X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which dropped 69% in its second weekend in 2009.  The X-Men films have never had particularly great legs at the box office, but with not a whole lot of competion and what appears to be decent word-of-mouth (it's a really good movie, dammit!), it's hanging in there.  It's doing great business overseas, where it's earned $159 million. 

Even more grateful for its overseas haul is The Smurfs 2, which underperformed stateside this weekend with $18.2 million.  The original Smurfs earned $35.6 million on it's opening weekend in 2011, but the sequel has only earned $27.8 million since opening last Wednesday.  But it's earned nearly double that amount overseas with $52 million, so don't go scratching The Smurfs 3 off of your 2015 calendars just yet. 

The Conjuring had another great weekend, crossing the $100 million mark with $13.6 million.  That's particularly impressive for a horror film, as those usually disappear after their first weekend. 

In limited release, Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine earned an excellent $2 million in just 50 theaters, while The Way Way Back earned $2.8 million and Fruitvale Station earned $2.7 million.

A pair of kids' films will not being doing the Smurfs any favors next weekend, as Disney's Planes and Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters will be opening in theaters.  Folks looking for laughs can enjoy We're The Millers, while the IMAX should be busy again next weekend with the arrival of Elysium

Sunday
Jul282013

Weekend Box Office: July 26-28

Courtesy of Box Office Mojo:

1.  The Wolverine - $55 million

2.  The Conjuring - $22.1 million

3.  Despicable Me 2 - $16 million

4.  Turbo - $13.3 million

5.  Grown Ups 2 - $11.5 million

6.  Red 2 - $9.4 million

7.  Pacific Rim - $7.5 million

8.  The Heat - $6.8 million

9.  R.I.P.D. - $5.8 million

10.  Fruitvale Station - $4.6 million

He's the best there is at what he does, but despite being a damn fine movie, The Wolverine underwhelmed stateside this weekend with an estimated $55 million.  That should not come as a surprise, though, with audiences still wary of returning for another Wolverine solo outing after the critically maligned X-Men Origins: Wolverine, and with those trailers not doing too much to convince them that this film was a vast improvement.  Also, asking those same wary moviegoers to shell out the extra cash for 3D showings probably didn't help them this weekend either.

But, like Wolverine's healing factor, the movie will actually recover nicely.  With a reported budget of around $120 million, the sequel has already grossed $141 million worldwide and is scheduled to open in Japan in September.  The audiences who did show up this weekend - particularly the fans - also appeared to really enjoy the film, giving it an "A-" Cinemascore grade, which should hopefully give it some legs at the box office for a little while longer.  Combine that with the excellent X-Men: First Class (which also underwhelmed in its 2011 box office run), they've gone a long way to restore goodwill amongst the fans, which will definitely help when X-Men: Days of Future Past opens next summer.  In the long run, the movie is a success, but it just won't have a great opening weekend to boast about (Origins had a great opening weekend, and look how that turned out).

In the meantime, The Conjuring had an excellent second weekend, especially for a horror movie, dropping only 47% from last weekend to earn $22.1 million.  It now stands at $83 million domestically, and will easily pass the $100 million mark by next weekend.  There's also no stopping Despicable Me 2, which earned $16 million to bring its domestic total to $306 million, and became the sixth animated movie to pass $300 million at the box office. 

The other box office success story of the weekend was Fruitvale Station, which expanded to over 1000 theaters and earned a terrific $4.6 million.

As summer winds down, the offerings are getting slimmer, as next weekend sees the releases of The Smurfs 2, and the crime thriller 2 Guns, starring Mark Wahlberg and Denzel Washington. 

Wednesday
Jul242013

Movie Review: The Wolverine

Remember X-Men Origins: Wolverine?  Good, because neither does The Wolverine.

Four years after everyone's favorite adamantium-clawed mutant sputtered a bit (ok, a lot) with his first solo film, Wolverine gets a worthy do-over, courtesy of director James Mangold, a frighteningly intense Hugh Jackman, a talented supporting cast, and with a screenplay by Mark Bomback and Scott Frank. 

Welcome back, Wolverine.  We've missed you.

The Wolverine manages to find a nice balance between the Japanese saga told in the 1982 Chris Claremont/Frank Miller comics and the established film universe.  Opening with a flashback of Logan as a POW in a Nagasaki prison camp during World War II, he saves a young soldier named Yashida (Ken Yamamura) from a nuclear blast, suffering and healing from gruesome injuries in the process.  In the present day, Logan is a mess.  Distraught, and haunted by nightmares since having to kill Jean Grey during the events at the end of X-Men: The Last Stand, he's gone all scraggly and has retreated to the mountains of Canada.  He's friends with a bear, but even that ends badly.

But then he's visited by a mysterious woman called Yukio (Rila Fukushima). She's been tasked to bring Wolverine to Japan to visit his old friend Yashida, who became a successful businessman after his life was saved at Nagasaki, but who is now dying of cancer.  Yashida doesn't want to die.  Obsessed with Logan's healing factor, he claims that a way has been found to transfer the mutation to him, which would save his life and release Logan from his own long-suffering, seemingly endless lifespan.

Logan may be depressed, but he's not interested in giving up his healing factor.  Does he lose it anyway?  Yup.  And of course there are more sinister things at work - like Yashida's scheming son Shingen (Hiroyuki Sanada), who's not happy at all that the family business will be left to his daughter Mariko (Tao Okamoto) instead of him, and there are dealings with the Yakuza and other unsavory characters from the Japanese criminal underworld.  Then there's Viper (Svetlana Khodchenkova), the scientist who's as venomous as her name. 

The trailers we've seen for The Wolverine have been a bit misleading.  Yes, there are some really cool action sequences, like a fight scene on a bullet train, and Wolverine taking on scores of assassins at a funeral.  But there are long stretches of good story in here, and the movie plays less like a traditional superhero movie and more like a crime drama that just happens to have a guy with claws who heals really fast in the middle of everything.

This is definitely Hugh Jackman's best performance as Wolverine since the first two X-Men movies (and even his First Class cameo).  Where in Origins, he seemed far too polite, this Wolverine swears, has no patience for anyone, gets into fights, and he really, really doesn't want to be forced to take a bath.  For the first time, we see what it's like for him to deal with the terrible losses that come with living such a long life.  And after he's deprived of his healing factor, we get to see him deal with a different kind of fear for the first time.

Much credit also has to go to the women in this film, particularly Rila Fukushima and Tao Okamoto, who are both making their film debut.  Fukushima is quite a badass, and a sidekick for Wolverine that I'd love to see in more X-Men films.  Wolverine spends a good part of the film on the run with Okamoto's Mariko, and they not only have great chemistry in their scenes together, which are both touching and at times actually very funny.  Famke Janssen also returns in flashback form as Jean Grey, mainly to torment Wolverine, but it's nice to have her back in this series too.

There's also Svetlana Khodchenkova as Viper, who at times seems the odd one out.  She's the catalyst for a lot of the things that go wrong for Wolverine in the movie, but at times her character seems a bit out of place.  At least, a lot more comic-bookish than any of the other elements of the film, especially in the third act, which has the biggest CGI-action spectacle of the film.  I've heard complaints that the final act goes a bit overboard in that respect, but I enjoyed it, since it had a few surprises that I wasn't expecting (and not the obvious one).

Major props have to go James Mangold, who picked our flailing Wolverine solo film series back up from adamantium bullets and painfully-obvious CGI claws, and gave us just a beautifully-shot Wolverine movie that respects both the comics and the films.  The Wolverine is nastier and darker than what we've seen in the previous X-Men films, it's violent without being gratuitous about it, there's a bit of romance, it's funny as hell, and has characters that we actually care about - particularly Wolverine himself.

I can't end this review without mentioning the infamous end-credits scene.  Yes, it's awesome.  No, I'm not giving away what it is.  Just make sure you don't miss it.  Going by the audience response I saw (and participated in) last night to The Wolverine, and their reaction at seeing what's to come...let's just say next summer...there is an overall sense that the X-Men movies are finally back, and that is an amazing thing.