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Weekend Box Office Report: July 4 to July 6: Hellboy’s Fury

Weekend Top 10

# Title GROSS % Chg. Theaters Weeks AVG Total Distributor
1 Hellboy II: The Golden Army $35.9M NEW 3,204 1 11,200 $35.9M Universal
2 Hancock $33.0M  -47.3 3,965 2 8,322 $165.0M Sony
3 Journey to the Center of the Earth $20.6M NEW 2,811 1 7,321 $20.6M New Line
4 Wall-E $18.5M -43.1 3,849 3 4,808 $162.8M Buena Vista
5 Wanted $11.6M -42.2 3,157 3 3,669 $112.0M Universal
6 Get Smart $7.1M -36.0 3,086 4 2,302 $111.5M Warner Bros.
7 Meet Dave $5.3M NEW 3,011 1 1,760 $5.3M Fox
8 Kung Fu Panda $4.3M -41.2 2,704 6 1,590 $202.0M Dreamworks
9 Kit Kittredge: An American Girl $2.4M -28.5 1,849 4 1,274 $11.0M Picturehouse
10 Indiana Jones & the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull $2.2M -40.4 1,664 8 1,352 $310.5M Paramount

This weekend ushered in a rare occurrence at the North
American box office.  Hollywood
decided to unleash three wide releases on the unsuspecting public all at
once.  Two at a time seems to be
Hollywood’s healthy level of comfort.  Either one will win or both will find their own audiences.  But three?  At the same time?  Did they really think there was that much money to go around?  Turns out, not so much.  Two titles succeeded while one was
forced to subside – which is a nice way to say that two scored while one
flopped hard.

Pulling in over $10 million more in its opening weekend than
its predecessor, Hellboy II: The Golden Army managed to narrowly squeeze out last week’s champ, Hancock.  Critics across the board have embraced director, Guillermo del Toro’s
follow-up to the Oscar winning,
Pan’s Labyrinth, and audiences followed, proving that the critic’s
word is final.  Meanwhile, proving
that the critic’s word is meaningless, critically panned
Hancock managed a very reasonable 47% decline in its second
week.  Had Sony not passed on the
Hellboy sequel, it could have held down both of the top spots this week.

Sure on the surface, Journey to the Center of the Earth looks like a cheap way to wet the public’s appetite
for more 3D projects and hardly a film that can sustain an engaging story but
audiences ate it up anyway.  Actually, critics did too.  Mostly positive response led to a larger than expected debut in third
place this week.  And so the future
looks bright for 3D thrills.  The
best part about all of this … the movie magicians have finally found a way to
infuse Brandon Fraser with that last dimension his acting has always been
lacking.

Now, on to the loser, Eddie Murphy in Meet Dave.  Posting his lowest numbers since The Adventures of Pluto Nash, Murphy flops in seventh place with a pathetic per
screen average under $2K.  You will
get no sympathy from me, Mr. Murphy.  This is what you deserve for signing on to make a project where you are
the captain of a teeny tiny alien ship that crashes on earth into the body of a
human version of yourself.  In
fact, I think you should be happy to have made as much as you did.  Now, I don’t want to see you again
until they revive the
Beverly Hills Cop series.  Are we clear?

All this success and all this over crowding should have
meant a strong overall showing at the box office but ultimately ticket sales
were down 17% over the same frame last year.  In this case, more certainly did not amount to more.

NEXT WEEK: I think it’s fairly obvious to anyone with half a
monkey brain that Space Chimps will
take next weekend by storm.  I
mean, maybe
Mamma Mia! might
manage a strong second place finish if the counter-programming angle works in
their favour.  What other options
are there anyway?  There’s that bat
movie,
The Dark Knight, but who
wants to see that?  Wait.  This just in … EVERYONE wants to see
that little bat movie.

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