
The weekend's most notable fireworks came in limited release as the increasingly
crowded arthouse scene saw some red hot numbers from awards hopefuls.
George Clooney led the way with his legal thriller
Michael Clayton which bowed
in only 15 theaters but grossed an estimated $704,000 for an astounding
$46,933 average. Powered by strong reviews and starpower from the Oscar-winning
actor, the R-rated film is hoping to keep the momentum going when it
expands nationally on Friday into more than 2,400 theaters.
A pair of acclaimed filmmakers enjoyed encouraging sophomore expansions with
their latest efforts and delivered the next best averages.
Wes Anderson's comedy
The Darjeeling
Limited widened from two New York houses to 19 locations in seven
markets and grossed an estimated $553,000 for a powerful $29,099
average. Fox Searchlight will continue to open in more cities over the next two
weekends before going nationwide into more than 800 playdates at the end of the
month. Ang Lee's NC-17 romantic thriller
Lust, Caution also held up very well as
it entered new cities. The Focus release went from a solo Manhattan house to
17 venues and collected an estimated $369,000 for a potent $21,696 average.
Totals stand at $$477,000 for Lust and $781,000 for Darjeeling.

Also expanding and still generating good averages in their third frames were
Sean Penn's
Into the Wild and
Brad Pitt's
The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. Paramount Vantage widened
Wild from 33 to 135 houses and
grossed an estimated $1.3M for an impressive $9,593 average. Warner
Bros. made a leap from five to 61 locations with Jesse and made off with an
estimated $408,000 for a respectable $6,689 average. Cumes are $2.5M and
$746,000 respectively and each film will continue to add more cities and
theaters in the weeks ahead.

Not faring well in its national expansion was the drama The
Jane Austen Book Club which grossed an estimated $1.5M from 1,232 sites for a weak $1,247
average. Last weekend, the Sony Classics release averaged $4,700 from only 41
venues. Total sits at $2M.

Three films fell out of the top ten over the weekend. The Focus mob thriller Eastern Promises dipped 33% to an estimated $2M giving the David Cronenberg pic $14.3M overall. A decent $20M final seems likely which would put it about one-third below the $31.5M of the director's last film A History of Violence which also starred Viggo Mortensen.
Sony's Beatles-themed musical feature
Across the
Universe continued to have
great legs easing a mere 8% in its fourth outing to an estimated $1.9M. With $8M
in the bank from limited release, the Julie Taymor-directed pic goes wide on
Friday into more than 700 sites. Universe joins the music-themed films
Hairspray and
Once as movies with some of the best legs at the box office over the last
several months. But it was a sad tune for Universal's teen comedy
Sydney White
which tumbled 49% to an estimated $1.3M for a weak total of just $10.2M. Look
for a poor $13M finish.

The top ten films grossed a disappointing estimate of $61.9M which was down a substantial 37% from last year when The Departed debuted in first place with $26.9M; and off 23% from 2005 when Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit opened in the top spot with $16M.
Author: Gitesh Pandya, www.BoxOfficeGuru.com
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Bloody Mathias writes: on Oct 07 2007 06:22 PM I wish i could taste Ben Stiller's tears. (Reply to this) |
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Metafact writes: on Oct 07 2007 06:48 PM Good, now all we need is to have The Golden Compass bomb so that Hollywood will learn to make FAITHFUL adaptations of fantasy novels. (Reply to this) |
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~*Admiral Snowstorm*~ writes: on Oct 07 2007 07:02 PM $100 million for The Game Plan? Really? It's already made 46-some, and that's including its opening, which is [almost] always when movies make the most money in their run. The Game Plan would have to more than double its current sum and it's already made as much money at one time as it ever will. So unless it makes $7 million every week for the next month or two, I don't really see it making $100 million. I'd say $70 million or so seems likelier, personally. Not that it matters, though. At the end of the day it's still The Game Plan and undeserving of every dollar it makes. I am pleased at The Seeker's smashing failure, though. Hopefully this means no sequels. (Reply to this) |
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Ciaranmv writes: on Oct 07 2007 07:22 PM I loved the "Dark is Rising" the book, but the movie looks like a GAP commercial gone horribly wrong. Ben Stiller needs to get his act together and start making good movies... The only things I liked him in were "Meet the Parents" and that was because of DeNiro and "Zoolander" mostly because of his chemistry with Will Farrell and Owen Wilson. Let this be a lesson that remakes of 1970 romantic comedies can't buy love! (Reply to this) |
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blank blank writes: on Oct 07 2007 07:50 PM i agree with ciaranmv.... hopefully, this will make hollywood realize that ben stiller is just not funny. lets recap all of his movies: night at the muesum, meet the fockers, meet the parents, envy, starsky and hutch, dodgeball (somewhat funny but definately not because of stiller), along came polly, and all the rest that i cant think of because they all suck and ben stiller is the same exact character in them all. stiller is kind of like adam sandler that no matter how ****ty the movie is, people will come see it. hopefully the heartbreak kid is the end of this trend and will force stiller to make GOOD MOVIES. but i doubt it. as for hollywood making faithful adaptations, i doubt that even if the golden compass bombs (i think it will be a good movie, but it wont be the blockbuster hollywood wants it to be) hollywood wont learn its lesson. (Reply to this) |
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OriolesFan07 writes: on Oct 07 2007 09:37 PM Yeah, I think boxofficeguru is far to kind in long term projections, something I've noticed since I've been reading their columns for about a year now. I don't see The Game Plan having the steam to earn about 60 more million. I mean look at last week's weekday numbers, the daily grosses are already under 1 million for pete's sake. I'm assuming the film will see small drops, from about 25-35%, for the rest of it's run. If thats the case, it should end up at about $80-85 million, which is still a fantastic number. (Reply to this) |
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CoUcH ToMaToE DoUgIe writes: on Oct 08 2007 01:55 AM great here comes gameplan 2 i guess:( but hey at least ben stiller finally feeels the suffering for making us watch his terrible acting and comedy... almost. (Reply to this) |
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Gimy writes: on Oct 08 2007 06:10 AM Gameplan...perfect marketing. anybody ELSE have an explanation why a presumed hack KIDS comedy can make that much money?? NOTHING else in the family genre has been released in forever and that wreaked of The Pacifer 2: Superbowl Sequel. christ, I ALMOST took my son to see it last week on vacation cuz we were so desperate for a kid's movie. still gonna see the Heartbreak kid though, i heard good things. hopefully the Farrelly brothers remembered how to be funny(stuck on you, fever pitch...sh3t and sh3t respectively). (Reply to this) |
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unbreakable_samurai writes: on Oct 08 2007 09:05 AM It's to bad The Heartbreak Kid didn't do better, it wasn't great but pretty good and it still was the best comedy I've seen in awhile. Nice to see Stiller and the Farrelly Brothers make an R rated comedy. The Jane Austen Book Club was pretty good, kinda had me on the fence for awhile but it ended well(B-). I'm very happy that the indi films are still doing well, just keep them expanding, so I get them. (Reply to this) |
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danterandal19 writes: on Oct 08 2007 10:47 AM In reply to this comment (#1175847) Well, the grosses were under one mil, because kids are in school during the weekdays...which explains why the Kingdom lead the weekdays in terms of gross. And it might be a terrible movie (however way you see it), but I'm glad that The Rock has a legitimate hit on his hands; maybe this will show that he can bring in people...or maybe The Game Plan 2, whatever. (Reply to this) |
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