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If at first you don't succeed... After narrowly missing a return to first place last weekend, Dreamworks' How to Train Your Dragon easily took the top spot in its fifth frame. This is the first movie to return to number 01 since The Passion of the Christ over Easter weekend 2004 (its seventh weekend). How to Train Your Dragon joins such rare company as Forrest Gump, Jerry Maguire, and Signs. Dropping 21%, the critically-acclaimed and just-plain awesome cartoon earned another $15.3 million (the eighth-biggest fifth weekend of all-time). The picture has amassed $178 million stateside and $372 million worldwide. Domestically, it's running ahead of every single non-Shrek Deamworks cartoon outside of Kung Fu Panda. On a weekend-by-weekend scale, it's nearly doubled the fifth weekend of every other such Dreamworks film (Kung Fu Panda made $7.3 million in its fifth weekend and Monsters Vs. Aliens made $8.5 million in the same period respectively). Even Shrek and Shrek 2 could only muster $13 million on their respective fifth weekends, while Shrek the Third grossed $9 million in weekend five. Ironically, the dragon fable is showing such strong legs that Dreamworks may end up shooting itself in the foot when it steals away the 3D screens on May 21st for the likely quick-kill theatrical blitz of Shrek Forever After. Shrek 4 surely will open huge, but theaters prefer leggier hits as opposed to massively front-loaded blockbusters. Don't be surprised if Dreamworks keeps How to Train Your Dragon in at least a token number of 3D screens after the fourth Shrek picture debuts. Come what may, this is a remarkable run for a surprisingly good movie.
Second place went to The Back-Up Plan, as CBS Films' Jennifer Lopez rom-com debuted with $12.2 million. It's not a scorcher of a debut, in fact it's one of Lopez's smallest debuts as a lead in a mainstream picture. But this is Lopez's first film since Monster-In-Law back in summer 2005. Monster-In-Law opened to $23 million over the second weekend of summer 2005, which is still Jennifer Lopez's biggest debut. That picture had a stronger hook and added buzz of Jane Fonda's return to big-screen acting. $12 million is generally a decent number for an untested star (Kristen Bell's When In Rome for example), but it's a pretty soft number for someone who used to do very well in this genre. Point being, it appears that Lopez may be the sort of celebrity that attracts more attention in the gossip rags than as an actual actress. As someone who rooted for her back in her Money Train/Jack days (when she was a shockingly good actress holding up otherwise terrible films), this is a sad turn of events. Of course, it doesn't help that most of her films, pre and post stardom, just weren't very good. Aside from Out of Sight and Selena, her best films are arguably Anaconda and The Cell, which doesn't exactly bode well for her credibility (she's done some interesting indie work like Blood and Wine and Bordertown, but no one ever saw those). Still, the solution here is easy: supporting roles in interesting films, rather than playing the lead in bland pictures that depend on you to carry them.
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The other major opener was the Disney documentary Oceans. After pulling in around $2.5 million on its Earth-Day opening last Thursday, the picture grossed $6 million over the weekend. That's the third-biggest opening for a documentary in history, behind Disney's Earth ($8.8 million) and Fahrenheit 9/11 ($23.9 million). Earth grossed $32 million stateside and earned another $76 million overseas. Oceans has already grossed $54 million overseas, which means the $80 million documentary will end up another solid investment. Expect another on of these next Earth Day. Last weekend's number one movie (with a bit of help from Thursday-night screenings, natch) fell to fifth place. Kick-Ass dropped 52%, which would have been OK if it had opened like the geek masterpiece that it was proclaimed as, as opposed to a garden-variety Lionsgate picture that it is. The people who wanted to love it ended up loving it, but the general moviegoers at best liked it. Plus, The Losers and its misguided PG-13 siphoned off younger moviegoers who were turned away from the R-rated Kick-Ass. Still, the $50 million acquisition has $34.7 million in the bank, and it has already grossed a surprisingly robust (for Lionsgate) $21 million overseas. Point being, it wasn't the second coming of anything, but it will be just fine in the long run. Heck, if the overseas numbers hold up and the nerds come through for the DVD/Blu Ray, we may even get that Hit Girl-centric sequel after all.
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That's all that's fit to print this weekend. Join us next weekend, when A Nightmare On Elm Street opens to summer-level numbers despite not actually being a summer release (it finally screens on Wednesday, but I'll likely wait until Friday as the wife wants to see it too). And Brendan Fraser returns to family fare as he faces off against various woodland creatures in Furry Vengeance.
Scott Mendelson
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