Weekend
Boxoffice March 15 - 17, 2002
Ice was hot at the boxoffice this weekend as
20th Century Fox's PG-rated "Ice Age" pulled in
the coveted family audience and slid into a cool estimate of $47.9
million for its North American debut.
The sensational opening was the biggest ever in March by a wide
margin, topping Universal's "Liar Liar" ($31.4 million).
It also marked the third-largest animated opening in boxoffice
history, after Buena Vista's "Monsters, Inc." ($62.6 million)
and "Toy Story 2" ($57.4 million), and is the largest
opening so far this year.
In another record for animated films, the opening for "Ice
Age," the first feature from Fox's Blue Sky Studios, is the
biggest debut ever for a non-Disney film -- topping DreamWorks'
"Shrek," which opened to $42.3 million and went on to
gross $267.7 million domestically.
The stellar boxoffice generated by the CG-animated comedy, which
features the voices of Ray Romano, John Leguizamo
and Denis Leary and was helmed by Chris Wedge, took the industry
by surprise as tracking indicated "Ice Age" would land
near the $30 million mark.
As a result, the huge debut of "Ice Age" helped lead
the total boxoffice this weekend to the biggest gross ever recorded
in March. The Hollywood Reporter projects the total for all films
to be in the high $130 million-to-low-$140 million area -- as compared
with last year's $84.2 million. The estimated total for this weekend's
top 12 films was an astonishing 71% higher than the comparable period
a year ago.
The spectacular performance at the ticket window pushed the year-to-date
total for national boxoffice to a nearly 10% lead on last year's
record pace -- up from a 6% margin only three days earlier.
With strong bows by two other new releases -- the horror picture
"Resident Evil" at No. 2 and police spoof "Showtime"
at No. 3 -- and solid results from holdovers, it seemed there was
a film for every taste.
"Ice Age" led the way with $47.9 million since its March
15 bow, smashing the old three-day record for a March release --
$31.4 million for Jim Carrey's "Liar Liar" in 1997.
It becomes the third best animated opening of all time after "Monsters,
Inc." ($62.6 million) and "Toy Story 2" ($57.4 million).
Budgeted in the high $50 million range, "Ice Age" ends
a jinx for its distributor Twentieth Century Fox, whose efforts
to break the cartoon dominance of Walt Disney Co. and closely held
DreamWorks SKG resulted in the middling "Anastasia" and
the disastrous "Titan A.E."
Going into the weekend, Fox had forecast an opening in the $30
million range, said Bruce Snyder, president of distribution at the
Fox Entertainment Inc. -owned studio. The film revolves around two
woolly mammoths (voiced by Ray Romano and John Leguizamo)
who discover a human baby.
Families accounted for 70 percent of the audience. But the studios
did not ignore other demographics. Youngsters rushed to "Resident
Evil" (Screen Gems), a horror picture based on a popular video
game, which scared up $18.2 million. Older fans made time for "Showtime"
(Warner Bros.), a comedy starring Robert De Niro and Eddie
Murphy, which collared $15.4 million.
"Ice Age," $47.9 million.
"Resident Evil," $18.2 million.
"Showtime," $15.4 million.
"The Time Machine," $10.9 million.
"We Were Soldiers," $8.8 million.
"All About the Benjamins," $4.9 million.
"40 Days and 40 Nights," $4.6 million.
"John Q," $3.7 million.
"A Beautiful Mind," $3.4 million.
"Return to Never Land," $2.3 million.
BOX OFFICE REACHES $124 MILLION
Last week's champion, the time-travel adventure "The Time
Machine" (DreamWorks), fell to No. 4 with $10.9 million, while
Mel Gibson's Vietnam War saga "We Were Warriors"
(Paramount) dropped to No. 5 with $8.8 million in its third round.
According to box office tracking firm Exhibitor Relations, the
top 12 films grossed $124.2 million, up 49 percent from last weekend,
and up 71 percent from the year-ago period when "Exit Wounds"
opened at No. 1 with $18.5 million. The last time receipts were
this high was the holiday-boosted Dec. 28-30 weekend, when the top
12 tallied $147 million.
Fox also had a good weekend in the limited-release arena, as the
lesbian romance "Kissing Jessica Stein" pulled in $355,000
from 26 theaters in six cities. The comedy, released by its Fox
Searchlight unit, will add cities over the next few weeks before
going national in 400-500 theaters on April 5.
Budgeted at under $1 million, the independently made film revolves
around a woman who switches teams when she tires of meeting ineligible
men. Its themes of loneliness and friendship resonated with women
of all persuasions, said Steve Gilula, president of distribution
at Fox Searchlight.
Among the major debuts, the numbers for zombie thriller "Resident
Evil" were boosted by actresses Milla Jovovich and
Michelle Rodriguez, who drew young women to a film that ordinarily
would be dominated by males, said Jeff Blake, president of distribution
at Sony Pictures Entertainment, the Sony Corp owned parent of Screen
Gems.
Sony acquired North American distribution rights from its German
producer, Constantin Film, which is moving ahead with a sequel,
said Mitch Horwits, president of Constantin's U.S.-based unit.
The bow for "Showtime" was on target, said Dan Fellman,
president of distribution at Warner Bros., a unit of AOL Time Warner
Inc . The film, which cost over $50 million, pulled in an audience
that was 60 percent over 25 years. De Niro and Murphy play two real-life
cops enlisted to play themselves as a TV crew follows them on their
rounds.
'TIME' TICKS AT $40 MILLION
After 10 days in release, the adaptation of H.G. Wells' "The
Time Machine" has earned $40.1 million. Directed by Wells'
great-grandson, Simon Wells, it stars Australian actor Guy Pearce
and Irish pop singer Samantha Mumba.
The sci-fi film lost a hefty 52 percent of its audience, as did
another new release from last weekend, "All About the Benjamins."
The crime comedy, starring rapper Ice Cube, fell three places to
No. 6 with $4.9 million and a 10-day haul of $17.4 million. New
Line is also owned by AOL Time Warner.
"We Were Warriors" has collected $53.6 million after
17 days. The film was budgeted in the $70 million range. Paramount
Pictures is a unit of Viacom Inc .
With one week ahead of the Academy Awards in Hollywood, the top
10 contained only one best picture nominee, "A Beautiful Mind"
at No. 9. The Russell Crowe drama earned $3.4 million, as
its 87-day total rose to $149.2 million. It was released by Universal
Pictures, a unit of Vivendi Universal SA .
Leading Oscar nominee "The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship
of the Ring" (New Line) fell one spot to No. 11 with $2.1 million
and a 89-day haul of $294.3 million. "Rings" has 13 nominations,
while "Mind" has eight, tied with "Moulin Rouge,"
which is available on home video.
New releases next weekend include "Blade 2," the 20th
anniversary reissue of "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" and
the college comedy "Sorority Boys."
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