U.S. Box Office Hits Longest Modern Slump

By DAVID GERMAIN, AP Movie WriterSun Jun 26, 6:46 PM ET


"Batman Begins" took in $26.8 million to remain the top movie for the second straight weekend, but it could not keep Hollywood from sinking to its longest modern box-office slump.

Overall business tumbled despite a rush of familiar new titles — "Bewitched," a "Love Bug" update and the latest zombie tale from director George Romero.

Revenues for the top 12 movies came in at $116.5 million, down 16 percent from the same weekend last year, when "Fahrenheit 9/11" opened as the top movie with $23.9 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

It was the 18th weekend in a row the box office declined, passing a 1985 slump of 17 weekends that had been the longest since analysts began keeping detailed figures on movie grosses.

"Batman" lifted its 12-day total to $121.7 million.

Nicole Kidman and Will Ferrell's sit-com update "Bewitched" debuted in second place with $20.2 million.

Audiences were lukewarm toward the weekend's other major premieres. "Herbie: Fully Loaded," with Lindsay Lohan behind the wheel of the speedy VW "Love Bug," was No. 4 with $12.75 million, raising its total since debuting Wednesday to $17.8 million.

"George Romero's Land of the Dead," the fourth installment of the flesh-munching zombie saga from the director of "Night of the Living Dead," debuted at No. 5 with $10.2 million.

In narrower release, the documentary "Rize," about the south-central Los Angeles dance form known as krumping, opened at No. 12 with $1.6 million.

In limited release, the nature documentary "March of the Penguins" had a strong debut of $121,788 in four theaters. "Yes," starring Joan Allen, Simon Abkarian and Sam Neill in a drama about an affair between an Irish-American married woman and a Lebanese man, opened with $29,437 in seven cinemas.

Theater revenues have skidded about 7 percent compared to last year. Factoring in higher ticket prices, movie admissions are off 10 percent for the year, according to box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.

If the slump continues, Hollywood is on course for a third straight year of declining admissions and its lowest ticket sales since the mid-1990s.

"We're working with a pretty huge deficit that would take a lot of business to overcome," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. "Just breaking the slump is not enough. We would have to reverse the trend and see attendance on a big uptick."

Even with a big Fourth of July weekend expected from Steven Spielberg and Tom Cruise's "War of the Worlds," which opens Wednesday, Hollywood still may not snap its losing streak. Over the same weekend last year, "Spider-Man 2" pulled in $180 million in its first six days, leading the industry to a record Fourth of July.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at North American theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. "Batman Begins," $26.8 million.

2. "Bewitched," $20.2 million.

3. "Mr. and Mrs. Smith," $16.75 million.

4. "Herbie: Fully Loaded," $12.75 million.

5. "George Romero's Land of the Dead," $10.2 million.

6. "Madagascar," $7.3 million.

7. "Star Wars: Episode III — Revenge of the Sith," $6.25 million.

8. "The Longest Yard," $5.5 million.

9. "The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl in 3-D," $3.4 million.

10. "Cinderella Man," $3.3 million.



Yahoo! News
 
Same here, maybe if they came up with original material instead of all these damn remakes, also is it just me or is anyone else gettin fed up with all the CGI used in movies nowadays?

Whatever happened to sets, now it all green screen :rolleyes:

I gotta admit tho i am a Romero fan so will prolly go & see his one :)

BaNzI :D
 
How much do you like all the commercials at the start of the movie.
I say they should play them at the end. :D
 
I never watch em m8, i always go to the loo for a herbal smoke, that way by the time i finished the trailers are over & the main movie is just about to start :D

BaNzI :D
 
banzibaby said:
I never watch em m8, i always go to the loo for a herbal smoke, that way by the time i finished the trailers are over & the main movie is just about to start :D

BaNzI :D
Besides trailers we have commercials, you don't have commercials?:confused:
 
Yee we have commercials as well m8 sadly, some of the cinema's here have puggies (fruit machines/one arm bandits) in the halls, so i just waste a couple o quid in them after me smoke then in to watch the movie :)

BaNzI :D
 

dx

1
With the advent of larger Plasma/LCD cinema Hi-Def screens and Dolby/DTS Digital surround systems... the term "home theatre" is now my choice to experience a movie. It's close enough on most movies... and I'm pretty picky. Plus I can pause... go to the restroom, take a call, etc. all without missing a thing. Even if I do miss something, I just go back a little. Plus the added features on DVDs are often worth the wait.

I must admidt though, some movies, like the latest Star Wars are an exception. This kind of movie is best in a theatre for your first experience.

I know I'm not the only one who feels this way. The DVD/Home Theatre experience is a great success... lots of money to be made there. Thus, the Industry should not lament at the old ways they distributed their product and made money. Instead, they should broaden their perspective and focus more on modern ways. ;)
 
Top