I need to drop a review of Hancock, which I enjoyed despite some's concern 
about the less than model Black man's behaviour, and despite the fact that it's 
Will Smith in his eleventy-millionth performance. Haven't seen Hellboy yet. It 
was raining in the ATL yesterday and my wife and I stayed in, watching "Sky 
High" for the first time (funny!), and Young and the Restless on tape (for her, 
you know!)
Was "Hellboy 2" any good? Critics are just so-so about it.

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "ravenadal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Hancock has made $345,234,000 worldwide

http://boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=2503&p=.htm

'Hellboy II' Sizzles

by Brandon Gray

July 13, 2008

Two unpolished superheroes, Hellboy and Hancock, were neck-and-neck
for the top spot over the weekend. Without a new release with
blockbuster potential, though, overall attendance lulled to the lowest
level the post-Independence Day weekend has seen since 2001, but
business is poised to roar back next weekend with the arrival of The
Dark Knight.

Hellboy II: The Golden Army stormed onto approximately 4,400 screens
at 3,204 theaters and grossed an estimated $35.9 million over the
weekend, a significant bump over its predecessor's $23.1 million
start. That was the bar for Hellboy II's success, but the movie also
posted a greater debut than the similar comic book adventure, The
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, which opened on the same date five
years ago.

While the first Hellboy's $60 million final gross back in Spring 2004
wasn't convincing for distributor Sony to take on a sequel, the
picture was well regarded by many and support grew on DVD. Universal
Pictures took over on the $85 million-budgeted Golden Army and
reported that the majority of the audience had seen the first movie in
theaters or on DVD. Universal's aggressive marketing campaign picked
up where the first picture left off tonally and reiterated the origin
of the Hellboy character as well as the Men in Black-like premise. At
the forefront were the picture's colorful visuals and sense of humor.

Hellboy II nabbed $15 million more than fellow opener Journey to the
Center of the Earth 3D, which in turn earned $15 million more than
another debuting title, Meet Dave. The $60 million Journey mined a
decent estimated $20.6 million on around 3,200 screens at 2,811 sites.
About $11.7 million or 57 percent of that weekend gross came from Real
D's 3D presentations at 854 locations, the format's biggest release to
date. Distributor Warner Bros. marketed the picture like a theme park
attraction and noted that families comprised 60 percent of the audience

Meet Dave short-circuited in its opening, like many sci-fi comedies
before it. The Eddie Murphy vehicle logged an estimated $5.3 million
on around 3,300 screens at 3,011 venues, faring marginally better than
past flops like The Adventures of Pluto Nash and What Planet Are You
From? Meet Dave's limited advertising focused on the gimmick of a tiny
Murphy and crew piloting a normal-sized Murphy and little else.

Among holdovers, last weekend's champ, Hancock, descended 47 percent
to an estimated $33 million, lifting its total to $165 million in 12
days. In terms of attendance, the Will Smith spectacle is tracking
ahead of Men in Black II through the same point, though it trails
Independence Day and the first Men in Black by a wide margin.

Wall-E collected an estimated $18.5 million in its third weekend, down
43 percent for a stellar $162.8 million tally. So far, it's about on
par with Pixar stablemate Cars' draw through day 17. Another special
effects action picture, Wanted, rounded out the Top Five with an
estimated $11.6 million, notching a solid $111.5 million in 17 days.

Meanwhile, Kung Fu Panda became the first non-Shrek feature from
DreamWorks Animation to cross the $200 million mark. 


 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to