showbiz
Audiences say 'yes' to Jim Carrey with $18M debut
Posted on Monday, Dec. 22, 2008
by Associated
Press
Movie audiences greeted Jim Carrey and Will Smith with a lukewarm "yes" as snowstorms undermined weekend debuts from both stars.
Carrey's comedy Yes Man opened at No. 1 with (US)$18.2 million in ticket sales, while Smith's drama Seven Pounds came in second with $16 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
Debuting at No. 3 with $10.5 million was Matthew Broderick's animated family flick The Tale of Despereaux.
The new movies arrived in theaters Friday just as storms pounded the Northeast.
"Those markets back east just got hammered," said Chris Aronson, distribution executive for 20th Century Fox, whose sci-fi saga The Day the Earth Stood Still slipped from No. 1 to No. 4 with $10.2 million. The movie starring Keanu Reeves raised its 10-day total to $48.6 million.
Yes Man, released by Warner Bros., stars Carrey as a loser who turns his life around by subscribing to a philosophy of saying "yes" to everything. Sony's Seven Pounds casts Smith as a mysterious IRS agent doing good deeds for strangers, and Universal's Tale of Despereaux features Broderick as the mouthpiece for a tiny mouse on a heroic mission.
In limited release, Mickey Rourke's acclaimed drama The Wrestler had a heavyweight debut, taking in $209,474 in just four theaters for a whopping average of $52,369.
By comparison, Yes Man played in 3,434 theaters and averaged $5,288 per theater, while Seven Pounds opened in 2,758 and averaged $5,801 per theatre. The No. 3 film The Tale of Despereaux played in 3,104 theaters and grabbed $3,385 per venue.
The film released by Fox Searchlight stars Rourke as a former wrestling champion struggling for one last taste of past glory. The comeback theme of The Wrestler parallels Rourke's real life, with the actor in the running for an Academy Award nomination after his bad boy behavior virtually ruined his career in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
While winter came in with a bang, Hollywood's solid year was going out with a whimper. The overall box office plunged for the second straight weekend as this season's pre-holiday offerings continued to lag far behind the strong finish provided by such 2007 hits as Smith's I Am Legend and Alvin and the Chipmunks.
The top 12 movies took in $82.8 million, down 44 percent from the same weekend last year, when National Treasure: Book of Secrets led with $44.8 million.
The last two ho-hum weekends have hindered Hollywood's shot at breaking the domestic revenue record of $9.7 billion set last year. Revenues through Sunday were at $9.24 billion, virtually even with 2007 through the same date, according to box-office tracker Media By Numbers.
Given the sour economy, studio executives generally are satisfied with this year's results. Hollywood tends to ride out recessions with solid business, since movies are relatively inexpensive compared to entertainment options such as concerts or sports events.
"The movie business may be recession-proof, but this weekend, it's not weather-proof," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of Media By Numbers.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to Media By Numbers LLC.
North American Top Ten
Yes Man, $18.2 million.
Seven Pounds, $16 million.
The Tale of Despereaux, $10.5 million.
The Day the Earth Stood Still, $10.2 million.
Four Christmases, $7.7 million.
Twilight, $5.2 million.
Bolt, $4.3 million.
Slumdog Millionaire, $3.2 million.
Australia, $2.3 million.
Quantum of Solace, $2.2 million.
You need to be logged in to leave a comment.
There are currently no comments.
subscribe to our blog
All PostsBrowse by category
- Photo Galleries
- Awards Central
- Cineplex Polls
- Have Your Say
- Casting Couch
- Film Fests
- One-on-One With...
- Listed
- In Production
- Keeping It Reel: Rants & Raves
- Celeb and Box Office Round-Up
- In brief
- The Dish
Archive
Tags
- 17 again
- 3D
- academy awards
- adam sandler
- alice in wonderland
- angelina jolie
- anne hathaway
- anne hathway
- batman
- bradley cooper
- brad pitt
- britney spears
- bruno
- catherine hardwicke
- chris brown
- chris pine
- christian bale
- christopher nolan
- colin farrell
- comic-con
- dakota fanning
- daniel radcliffe
- danny boyle
- david fincher
- disney
- drew barrymore
- edward cullen
- emma watson
- george clooney
- guy ritchie
- harry potter and the half-blood prince
- heath ledger
- hugh jackman
- IMAX
- iron man
- jack black
- james cameron
- james franco
- jason bateman
- jennifer aniston
- jennifer hudson
- jesse eisenberg
- jim carrey
- johnny depp
- jude law
- kate winslet
- kristen stewart
- liam neeson
- lindsay lohan
- mark ruffalo
- McG
- megan fox
- meryl streep
- michael cera
- michael jackson
- mickey rourke
- mike judge
- miley cyrus
- milk
- natasha richardson
- new moon
- nicole kidman
- oscars
- paul rudd
- poll
- precious
- quantum of solace
- quentin tarantino
- reese witherspoon
- ricky gervais
- rihanna
- rip
- robert downey jr
- robert downey jr.
- robert pattinson
- rupert grint
- ryan reynolds
- sacha baron cohen
- sean penn
- seth rogen
- sherlock holmes
- slumdog millionaire
- star trek
- stephenie meyer
- taken
- taraji p. henson
- terminator salvation
- the curious case of benjamin button
- the dark knight
- the hangover
- the wrestler
- tiff
- TIFF
- tiff09
- TIFF 09
- tim burton
- tom cruise
- transformers
- twilight
- watchmen
- where the wild things are
- will ferrell
- wolverine
- zac efron
- zack snyder