
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 3 - MI3 7.6
POSEIDON 7.2
RV 2.3
JUST MY LUCK 2.0
AMERICAN HAUNTING, AN 1.2
STICK IT 1.1
UNITED 93 1.0
SILENT HILL .7
GOAL!: THE DREAM BEGINS .6
ICE AGE 2: THE MELTDOWN .6
Amazing.AndyDursin wrote:FRIDAY estimates -- and they're not prettyIs POSEIDON on track to be this year's version of KINGDOM OF HEAVEN? Given its budget, bad reviews, and what looks like a tepid opening, I'd say it's bad news all the way around.
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 3 - MI3 7.6
POSEIDON 7.2
RV 2.3
JUST MY LUCK 2.0
AMERICAN HAUNTING, AN 1.2
STICK IT 1.1
UNITED 93 1.0
SILENT HILL .7
GOAL!: THE DREAM BEGINS .6
ICE AGE 2: THE MELTDOWN .6
True enough but that's $220 mil worldwide, on a movie with a $130 million budget...with the amount of effort that went into making it I can't imagine they did cartwheels over the results of the finished product (though maybe the 3-hour version will keep me awake -- I've yet to try it!Carlson2005 wrote:I think Warners would love to have this year's Kingdom of Heaven - that took $220m. And considering some people were predicting a $12m opening weekend for Poseidon, this is doing very, very slightly better than expected.
No-one had been predicting a $25m figure for Poseidon for a long time - Variety thought it would struggle to get past $20m.AndyDursin wrote:As far as POSEIDON goes, a $12 million opening weekend was expected? I think that's what most analysts had the Lindsay Lohan movie pegged at. Most everything I saw had it around $25 million and those were the conservative estimates.
Will the ship hit the fans?
'MI3' looking to float past 'Poseidon'
By Gabriel Snyder, Dave McNary
Warner Bros. hopes to avert that sinking feeling this weekend as its pricey "Poseidon" remake bows.
Studio aud tracking on the Wolfgang Petersen-helmed pic has been weak, leading to industry expectations that the film will have trouble opening past $20 million and will likely cede the weekend crown to "Mission: Impossible III" in its soph sesh.
Warner maintains "Poseidon" cost north of $150 million, but the budget was reportedly closer to $200 million.
All told, studios are girding for a weekend that will likely be well behind the comparable frame a year ago. If B.O. trails last year, it would be the first time in eight weeks; the March 17 frame, led by the $25.7 million "V for Vendetta" opening, trailed '05 by 9%. Nonetheless, the year's lead over last, currently 6%, isn't in any danger this frame.
Warners is holding out the possibility that "Poseidon" could play better than expected. "The tracking is not up to our expectations," said distrib prexy Dan Fellman, "but there certainly have been times in our past where the tracking has not indicated the true results of our films. Wolfgang has made a good movie, and I'm hoping for a good box office this weekend."
As for "Mission's" second week, a drop of over 50% would be in keeping with the sort of numbers posted by both previous entries in the spy franchise. Last summer, "War of the Worlds," also starring Tom Cruise, saw biz drop 53% on its second weekend, making it likely that "MI3" will finish in the low 20s.
Warners will launch "Poseidon" at 3,555 theaters this weekend, while the other new wide releases include 20th Century Fox and Regency's Lindsay Lohan vehicle "Just My Luck," which opens at 2,541 locations.
That pic was expected to counterprogram "Poseidon" by appealing to younger femmes turned off by disaster pics; ironically, the strongest quadrant on "Poseidon" in the most recent tracking results is women under 25
AndyDursin wrote:The only movie with equally bad word of mouth going around at the moment is X-MEN 3...not sure why people are so down on this movie but when you turn on the TV and even the publicity machine shows are wondering "why Brett Rattner ruined X-MEN" there has to be some kind of reason for it. (To say nothing of every "fanboy" corner of the internet who likewise are relentlessly, totally negative on it...and I thought the trailer looked OK, too!I'm not a huge Rattner believer, and I guess others aren't, either...
A lot of the overseas markets feel the same way, especially now day-and-date worldwide releases are becoming more common to avoid piracy. Both German and Italian exhibtors feel that The Da Vinci Code will do poorly in their territories because Summer is traditionally the worst time for movie attendance over there, but the studio is unwilling to wait until Autumn to release them there.MarkB wrote:I'm wondering if it's a mistake for studios to be starting the summer season in early May (as alluded to in the article Andy posted above). I used to think that a good movie could earn money any time of the year, but maybe it's unrealistic to expect $80-100 million openings before schools are out for the summer.
I guess I missed the bandwagon because I have no interest in seeing DA VINCI right now. The topic doesn't interest me, I've heard it beaten to death on news shows for months, and top it off we have Tom Hanks and his ridiculous looking hair...I dunno, just doesn't make me want to rush out and see it, but there are millions who read the book who will (I usually trust my dad's read on books, because he devours them, and he thought DA VINCI was one of the most poorly-written novels he'd read in years).Carlson2005 wrote:A lot of the overseas markets feel the same way, especially now day-and-date worldwide releases are becoming more common to avoid piracy. Both German and Italian exhibtors feel that The Da Vinci Code will do poorly in their territories because Summer is traditionally the worst time for movie attendance over there, but the studio is unwilling to wait until Autumn to release them there.