http://articles.latimes.com/2010/aug/17/entertainment/la-et-scott-pilgrim-20100817
For Amy Berciano, this was the moviegoing weekend of the summer. More than a year before "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World" hit movie theaters, the 20-year-old UCLA junior became a huge fan of the graphic novels that inspired the film. At July's Comic-Con International in San Diego, she waited more than an hour to meet the cast and filmmakers; "I even kissed [director] Edgar Wright on the cheek!" she bragged. After attending the debut midnight screening of the movie Thursday night while dressed as one of the characters Knives Chao, Scott Pilgrim's obsessive ex-girlfriend Berciano declared herself eminently satisfied. "They got the tone of the book just right, especially the way they brought to life those fighting scenes," she said. "I couldn't get enough." Her enthusiasm was shared by nearly everyone who saw the film in its opening weekend, particularly those younger than 35, who gave "Scott Pilgrim" an average grade of A, according to market research firm CinemaScore. Universal's internal exit polls were equally strong, and the film attracted scores of positive reviews. But as last weekend's box office numbers rolled in, all that hardly mattered at all. The movie sold only $10.6 million worth of tickets, a disappointing figure given that Universal Pictures spent about $85 million, before tax credits, on production and tens of millions more on marketing. Comic book hits: (since 1978) The Dark Knight, $533,345,358 Spider-Man $404,706,375 Spider-Man 2 $373,585,825 Spider-Man 3 $336,530,303 Iron Man $318,412,101 Comic book misses: Sheena $5,778,353 Batman: Mask of the Phantasm $5,617,391 Tank Girl $4,064,495 Barb Wire $3,793,614 Steel $1,710,972