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View Full Version : `Friday the 13th' nails No. 1 spot with $42.2M


StarshipTrooper
February 16th, 2009, 06:03 PM
`Friday the 13th' nails No. 1 spot with $42.2M

By David Germain

AP Movie Writer / February 15, 2009

LOS ANGELES—"Friday the 13th" had all the luck as the remake of the 1980 slasher flick opened with $42.2 million, putting blood and guts ahead of hearts over Valentine's Day weekend.

That was a record for the horror genre, topping the $39.1 million debut for 2004's "The Grudge." Accounting for today's higher admission prices, "The Grudge" sold slightly more tickets, however.

Released by the Warner Bros. banner New Line Cinema, "Friday the 13th" updates the grisly story of killer Jason Voorhees and his rampage among youths at a secluded summer camp.

On opening day -- which fell on Friday the 13th -- the remake pulled in $19.4 million, slightly more than the $19 million it cost to make the movie.

"It's a great title, and it was a great weekend to open. We had Friday the 13th and Valentine's Day," said Dan Fellman, head of distribution for Warner Bros. "I've seen it play a number of times, and the audience is with it the whole way. A lot of screams and a lot of laughs."

The "Friday the 13th" series has been one of the most-enduring horror franchises, spawning 10 sequels, including the crossover grudge match "Freddy Vs. Jason," pitting Voorhees against the boogeyman from "A Nightmare on Elm Street."

The movie bumped off the previous weekend's top earner, the Warner-New Line romance "He's Just Not That Into You," which fell to second-place but held up strongly over Valentine's weekend with $19.6 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Among other new movies, Disney's comedy "Confessions of a Shopaholic" landed in fourth-place with $15.4 million, while Sony's thriller "The International" is No. 7 with $10 million.

"Confessions of a Shopaholic" stars Isla Fisher as a magazine retail writer coping with her own compulsive buying habits. "The International" features Clive Owen as an Interpol agent and Naomi Watts as a prosecutor uncovering a bank's global misdeeds.

The combination of solid debuts and strong holdovers lifted Hollywood to its best President's Day weekend ever. The three-day overall total of $190 million blew away the previous best of $157.1 million over President's Day weekend in 2007, according to box-office tracker Media By Numbers.

For the year, revenues continue to soar, with revenue at $1.44 billion, up 22 percent through the same point in 2008. Factoring in 2009's higher ticket prices, movie attendance is running 20 percent higher than last year's.

"Hollywood seems to be unstoppable right now. With this notion of the recession helping the box office, I guess this is just another example of that," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of Media By Numbers. "People want to go to the movies and just have fun and escape. `Friday the 13th,' as scary as your mortgage banker is, Jason's scarier."

Academy Awards front-runner "Slumdog Millionaire" heads into Oscar weekend with sturdy box-office momentum. The Fox Searchlight release took in $7.2 million, raising its 14-week total to $86.5 million.

"Slumdog Millionaire" has dominated at earlier Hollywood honors and is considered the likely best-picture winner at next Sunday's Oscars.

"The awareness for the film just keeps increasing every week," said Richard Shamban, vice president of distribution for Fox Searchlight. "The publicity from the awards themselves will continue to help, win or lose."

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. "Friday the 13th," $42.2 million.

2. "He's Just Not That Into You," $19.6 million.

3. "Taken," $19.3 million.

4. "Confessions of a Shopaholic," $15.4 million.

5. "Coraline," $15.3 million.

6. "Paul Blart: Mall Cop," $11.7 million.

7. "The International," $10 million.

8. "The Pink Panther 2," $9 million.

9. "Slumdog Millionaire," $7.2 million.

10. "Push," $6.9 million.

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On the Net:

http://www.mediabynumbers.com

http://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2009/02/15/friday_the_13th_nails_no_1_spot_with_422m/?rss_id=Boston.com+--+Movie+news

monolith21
February 16th, 2009, 09:27 PM
I saw it. Got a free ticket when I bought the "His Name Was Jason" documentary. Its alright, not nearly as scary as some moments in the first three films. The film did suffer a bit from showing Jason too much. They always wanted to show the audience where he was which sort of took away from the whole "where is he" jump out at you sort of moments.

Friday the 13th played out through its many sequels so I guess it was ripe for a remake. However Platinum Dunes is making a big mistake creatively by remaking "Nightmare on Elms Street" without Robert Englund.

Monetarily speaking I suppose it'll be an excellent way to rake in the dough from all the idiot movie goers out there. The ones that text message the whole movie...have full volume conversations, yell things like "that's what I'm talkin' 'bout (insert explative)" everytime someone gets killed or gets naked.

In other words the exact same type of people I was surrounded by when I went to see the new "Friday the 13th".

On a side note...I'd pay twice as much for my already far overpriced movie tickets to go to a theater that strictly enforced the whole no talking/no cell phones rules. It would be worth the price of admission alone just to see those inconsiderate morons escorted out without hope of a refund.

StarshipTrooper
February 18th, 2009, 05:18 PM
However Platinum Dunes is making a big mistake creatively by remaking "Nightmare on Elms Street" without Robert Englund.

Well said (not well done, and not point taken). Going to post news articles at BSGClub.com/BGC tonight, but it's now my 3rd favourite BSG site (after CF.com and TOK.com). Help Wanted! Administrative positions available. Those people with good (not perfect) ethics and that I've known the longest will have the most influence.

:salute: