The first film opened very slowly, with massive per-screen averages leading up to a pre-Halloween wide release that grossed $21 million against the opening weekend of the comparatively under performing Saw VI (review) ($14 million). Paranormal Activity (review) ended up with $109 million, while the sequel opened with a massive $40 million weekend but ended with just $84 million (a meager 2.1x weekend-to-final gross multiplier). Even if the third picture manages equally poor legs, it will still end up with $110 million. Whether or not the series has peaked with the third installment like Saw III, this uber-cheap franchise has been a licence to print money for the last three years and should continue to be so for the next few Halloweens. Paramount has scored a studio's dream - blockbuster grosses on a franchise with minuscule costs. It's already done $26 million worldwide, giving the film a massive (for a cheap horror film) $80 million worldwide debut. Come what may, they will be milking this series until the audience stops caring.
The other two wide releases were both domestic bombs, but both have already scored overseas. The Three Musketeers (review), Paul W.S. Anderson's 3D version of the classic novel, grossed just $8.8 million. That's lower than the $10.3 million opening for The Musketeer back in 2001, and even the $10.6 million opening for Disney's The Three Muskteers back in 1993. The poorly-reviewed film played 50/50 across gender lines, with 36% under-25 and a Cinemascore grade of 'B'. Still, the film has done solid business in European markets for the last month, with a worldwide gross of $73 million already racked up for the $75 million production. Also scoring overseas was Universal's Johnny English Reborn (review). The sequel to the 2003 Rowan Atkinson spy-spoof grossed just $3.8 million this weekend stateside, but has already amassed $108 million worldwide.
In limited-release news, Margin Call (one of the better films of the season, natch) grossed a solid $582,000 on 56 screens, for a solid $10,930 per-screen average. The financial-crisis drama (starring Kevin Spacey, Stanley Tucci, Demi Moore, and Jeremy Irons among others) is also available as a Video On Demand title, making its theatrical performance all the more impressive. Martha Marcy May Marlene, the allegedly terrific Elizabeth Olsen drama about a young woman who escapes from a cult (my wife wants to see it so I'm waiting) scored $34,000 per-screen on four screens, while the documentary Being Elmo earned $25,000 on a single screen. The Mighty Macs, a family-friendly film about girls' basketball, grossed $1,000 per screen in 975 theaters. Snowmen (review), another family film, debuted with $73,000 on 19 screens.
That's it for this weekend. Join us next weekend when Puss In Boots (review) squares off against the Justin Timberlake/Amanda Seyfried sci-fi thriller In Time and Johnny Depp's second time playing Hunter S. Thompson in The Rum Diary (third if you count his narration of the terrific documentary Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson). In limited release, Roland Emmerich's allegedly solid attempt at historical fiction Anonymous, opens on 200 screens.
Scott Mendelson
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