Boxoffice Report Weekend April
12- 14, 2002, 'Changing Lanes' Collects $17.6m
Ben Affleck and Samuel L. Jackson's "Changing
Lanes" drew heavy traffic as the drama about two men bent
on revenge after a fender-bender debuted in the No. 1 spot with
$17.6 million.
"Panic Room," the top film for the last two weekends,
slipped to second place with $11.3 million, while Cameron Diaz's
romantic comedy "The Sweetest Thing" opened at
No. 3 with $10 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
The horror flick "Frailty," starring Matthew
McConaughey and Bill Paxton, premiered with $4.2 million,
tying for eighth place with "National Lampoon's Van Wilder."
In narrower release, the satiric comedy "Human Nature"
opened weakly with $300,000, averaging a meager $1,339 in 224 theaters.
The film stars Patricia Arquette and Tim Robbins and
was written by Charlie Kaufman ("Being John Malkovich").
"Changing Lanes" averaged $6,716 in 2,613 theaters, compared
with $3,745 in 2,670 cinemas for "The Sweetest Thing"
and $2,806 in 1,497 locations for "Frailty."
The overall box office continued a string of up weekends. The top
12 films grossed $84.1 million, an 11.5 percent increase from the
same weekend a year ago.
So far this year, Hollywood has posted domestic revenues of about
$2.25 billion, 18 percent ahead of last year's pace, when the industry
set a year-long record of $8.4 billion, said Paul Dergarabedian,
president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.
Healthy spring business could boost Hollywood's busy summer season,
which gets an early start next weekend with the debut of "The
Scorpion King," a spinoff of "The Mummy" franchise
starring pro wrestler The Rock.
"The fact that people are in theaters in pretty big numbers
in March and April bodes well for summer's chances," Dergarabedian
said. "The summer onslaught's right around the corner, and
lots of movie-goers are being exposed to all the trailers for the
big summer films."
"Changing Lanes" benefitted from generally positive reviews,
Affleck's allure to women and Jackson's appeal to black audiences,
said Wayne Lewellen, head of distribution for Paramount, which released
the film. The audience was split 50-50 between men and women, and
about 70 percent was older than 25, he said.
That demographic breakdown should help "Changing Lanes"
hold up against "The Scorpion King," which is expected
to appeal largely to teen-age boys and young males, Lewellen said.
"That movie should have a younger audience than ours,"
Lewellen said.
"The Sweetest Thing" drew mainly 17- to 25-year-olds
and a largely female audience, said Jeff Blake, president of worldwide
marketing and distribution for Sony, which released the movie.
With the eye-candy appeal of Diaz and co-stars Christina Applegate
and Selma Blair, "young males liked it just as much
for obvious reasons," Blake said. "As one of the few comedies
out there right now, it gives us a good chance to hold well."
The reissue of "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" took in $1.5
million, pushing its four-week gross to $32.9 million. The movie's
20-year total climbed to $432.7 million, edging past "Star
Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace" for No. 3 on the
all-time domestic box-office chart.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at North American
theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures
will be released Monday.
1.
"Changing Lanes," $17.6 million.
2.
"Panic Room," $11.3 million.
3.
"The Sweetest Thing," $10 million.
4.
"Ice Age," $8.7 million.
5.
"The Rookie," $8.1 million.
6.
"High Crimes," $8 million.
7.
"Clockstoppers," $4.8 million.
8.
(tie). "Frailty," $4.2 million.
9.
(tie). "National Lampoon's Van Wilder,"
$4.2 million.
10.
"Blade II," $4.1 million.
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