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Box Office Spin: Sandler Gay-OK

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 2 years ago
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Here are the facts: the Adam Sandler gay-sham com I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry won the weekend box office derby, pulling in about $35 million to Harry Potter and The What Kind Of Magical Scrape Have These Spooky Kids Conjured Up Now?!?’s $32 million. $35 million is a significant opening take, and it would not have been possible to rack up if Sandler’s base audience had been turned off by the pic’s pro-gay tolerance theme. Not only was the gay marriage thing not a problem–it might have been a plus. Just look at the numbers: Adam Sandler fans are more likely to rush out opening weekend see their guy pretend to pretend to be gay, than watch him in a serious film about post-9/11 ennuiby a factor of seven.

And now, here’s the spin: Jeff Wells, LAist and the New York Times think Mr. Potter’s 58% weekend-to-weekend decline may have been the result of Harry Potter overload. LAist has the better quip: “My guess is that the release of Deathly Hallows cost Order of the Phoenix a second consecutive weekend crown (I still can’t believe that Voldermort turned out to be Harry’s father!).” I honestly can’t tell if Nikki Finke is being sarcastic when she writes, “There’d been speculation whether the new Harry Potter book would cut into the franchise’s movie ticket sales. Nah!” I can tell you that she definitely loses points for using the term “fivequel.”

Meanwhile, Box Office Mojo couldn’t really care less about gay marriage vs. boy wizardry–for these datamasters, it’s all about Hairspray. Brandon Gray devotes the opening four paragraphs of a 7-graph writeup to the musical, which broke records for its genre. Gray notes that even adjusting for inflation, Hairspray’s $28 million opening easily beat the record for the best musical opening weekend ever previously held by The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. And it’s not just good news for song-and-dance lovers–New Line needed this hit. “It marks New Line’s first $20 million-plus launch since Wedding Crashers two years ago and breaks the distributor’s losing streak that had persisted since Final Destination 3 in February 2006.”

More spin:

Transformers is still doing okay — Comics2Film
A victory for homophobia? — Lou Lemenick
…or one for Jessica Biel’s butt? –Obsessed with Film

Box Office Spin: If Transformers is Just Boffo, What The Hell is Whammo?

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 2 years ago
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Let’s start with the facts: Transformers, which opened on Monday night, made $152.5 million domestically over its week-long opening weekend. That’s enough to give Michael Bay’s Ford commercial-with-kissing the record for the best opening week for a non-sequel EVAR; it was not, however, enough to break Spider-man 2’s record for the best July 4th opening weekend gross.

Now on to the spin: At MTV, Transformers “conquered”; at the LA Times and NY Times, it “dominated”. But Canada’s Globe and Mail holds Michael Bay’s film responsible for not being able to halt “the overall domestic box office plunge.” Yes, receipts were down 23 percent from the same weekend last year. Entertainment Weekly calls the fall “inevitable:, but I don’t know where you find inevitability in the statistics. Last year, the second Pirates of the Caribbean film grossed in five days about what it took Transformers seven days to produce. Are we to believe that the two mega-tentapoles were somehow playing on unequal fields?

Meanwhile, Variety called the Transformers bow a “boffo perf” –which is, according to the “slanguage” dictionary, the second-highest praise allowed. Pamela McClintock also notes that while Paramount Vantage’s bizarrely-spun A Mighty Heart screen slash didn’t much help that film, Harvey Weinstein’s slow-and-steady Sicko push is paying off. If Box Office Mojo’s breakdowns are to be believed, Michael Moore’s film is averaging about ten times Heart’s take on about the same number of screens.

Speaking of Box Office Mojo, the data kings are less back-handed than Variety in their assessment of Transformers‘ debut. Their generous writeup notes that the Bay flick “handily scored two minor records: biggest Tuesday daily gross with its $27.9 million opening day and top July 4th gross with Wednesday’s $29.1 million.” The always-thoughtful Brandon Gray pegged Transformers‘ success to a long lineage of disaster-themed July 4 hits.

In recent years, the industry has frequently and successfully associated Independence Day with disaster-themed spectacles from Terminator 2: Judgment Day to Armageddon to War of the Worlds, and Transformers fits that bill…DreamWorks and Paramount took a property of limited cinematic appeal—Transformers: The Movie was a theatrical bust in 1986—and sold it as another end-of-the-world event, bolstered by the visceral wonderment of seeing robots morph in live action settings.

Nikki Finke’s inside sources peg the success to Transformers’ ability to transverse cultural barriers. “The studio says that what is making the big box office difference is African Americans and Latinos flocking to see the film. But especially Latino audiences.” Dénos las robustezas del asesino!

Box Office Spin: Insert Your Favorite Cooking Metaphor … HERE

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 2 years ago
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This week’s spin is all about the revisions. The 8:17 AM Monday version of David Germain’s AP writeup stressed an action star’s humiliation at the hands of an imaginary rodent, leading with the headline, “Cartoon Rat Beats Bruce Willis.” At some point in the morning, the imagery was softened somewhat; the 9:55 headline, “Rat Rules Box Office With $47 Million,” takes Willis’ defeat out of the equation.

Over at Variety, Pamela McClintock was quick to note in her Saturday morning report that Ratatouille’s $16.5 million first day was “the lowest first-day opening for a Pixar film since Toy Story 2 in 1999.” By Sunday night, when the animated film’s massive victory over all comers was apparent, McClintock’s revised report described the film’s weekend-long ascendancy to the top spot as a “simmer.” For her part, Nikki Finke’s preferred cooking metaphor is “roasted,” which seems like a bit of an overstatement.) Remember, on Friday McClintock’s coverage gave the Die Hard sequel the edge in the race for to the top spot.

Meanwhile, while his Hollywood Reporter pre-weekend coverage had given the Pixar film the edge, Gregg Kilday notes that if Live Free’s Wednesday and Thursday receipts are taken into consideration, “Die Hard ended the weekend with a five-day estimated cume of $48.2 million, a whisker ahead of Ratatouille’s three-day gross.” Proof that an almost-senior citizen can cook a rat–he just needs five days and, like, a crock pot.

More on these movies at Spout:

Live Free or Die Hard
Ratatouille
Toy Story 2