Tuesday, July 21, 2009

I guess it's not a spoiler if it's advertised at Toys R Us. Old-school Destro confirmed in GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra action figure display.

This was taken at the Woodland Hills Toys R Us this evening. As you'll notice, this confirms the much-rumored hope that Christopher Eccleston will in fact end this first feature as the Destro that we know and love. With just under three weeks left to go, it seems that the first batch of reviews are in fact surprisingly positive. Certainly the film has benefited from the bottom-of-the-barrel expectations. Might those nasty rumors about Stephen Sommers being fired and locked out of the editing room been intentional misdirects, intended to completely depress expectations for a summer tent pole that Paramount knew was in a little trouble? Of course, the fact that Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen ended up being such a stinker probably hasn't hurt either, as that film's critical failure, coupled with the widespread disappointment of Terminator: Salvation, has left geeks with merely the hope that GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra just does what it sets out to do: make a live-action cartoon that feels like a GI Joe movie (and does it better than Street Fighter). Well, we'll know soon enough, because (of course) knowing is at least 50% of the battle.

Scott Mendelson

DVD Review: Green Lantern: First Flight (2009)

Green Lantern: First Flight
2009
77 minutes
Rated PG-13
Available July 28th to rent or own on DVD, two-disc DVD, Blu Ray, or OnDemand

by Scott Mendelson

In this era of reboots and franchise launches both good and bad that spend huge amounts of time with the origins and go out of their way to explain or justify their respective fantasy trappings, it is incredibly refreshing to see a superhero property that just trusts the audience to accept its world at face value. The newest DC Animated Universe feature, Green Lantern: First Flight, dispenses entirely with the origins in the first-five minutes. From then on, the film leaves Earth almost immediately for a full-on space adventure that spends as little time with exposition as humanly possible. While Wonder Woman was an angry feminist adventure epic, and The New Frontier was a rich tapestry of real-world history and DC mythology, this simpler new film is actually a science-fiction-tinged police procedural. It's not particularly deep and character development is almost non-existent, but it is a stunningly economical white-knuckle action picture.

Monday, July 20, 2009

I Love You Phillip Morris gets a trailer...


I'm hoping the actual film isn't quite as farcical as this trailer seems to appear, but that may just be a case of trying to rope in those hoping for Jim Carrey's pratfall antics. While Jim Carrey is no longer the biggest star on the planet (it's been well over fifteen years since Ace Ventura: Pet Detective), the lessening of said pressure has freed him to make some intriguing choices over the last ten years. Yes some (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) have worked out better than others (The Number 23), but Mr. Carrey is certainly someone who is still hungry for new artistic challenges.

Scott Mendelson

A trailer for Triangle...


I know nothing about this film, and I think I'm going to try to keep it that way. This looks awfully intriguing. Anyway, it comes out on October 16th in the UK, so hopefully someone will pick it up here. This certainly looks like prime Lionsgate material, although a more likely result would be Magnolia picking it up for a five-screen release followed by a quick trip to DVD.

Scott Mendelson

The one that started it all... Tyler Perry's I Can Do Bad All By Myself gets a trailer...


If it looks like you've already seen this movie several times before, it's because this was the play that formed the groundwork for the Tyler Perry template. It was his second play (after I Know I've Been Changed, which laid similar foundations) and it was the one that introduced Madea into the Perry world. While I desperately wish he'd do more than constant variations on 'struggling young woman finds a new lease on life through faith, family, and a handsome, blue-collar stud', it may be interesting to see him go back to the beginning. Considering that Tyler Perry followed up his very best film (The Family That Preys) with his very worst (Madea Goes to Jail), I really have no way of knowing where this will stand on the quality ladder. Still, come what may, Tyler Perry is arguably the only filmmaker left who makes genuine family dramas. And I still think he desperately needs to cast Tony Todd to play around in the Perry playground. Heck, I'd love to see what Eddie Murphy could do with such an atypical genre, as he desperately needs to try something different.

Scott Mendelson

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince pulls in over $159 million in just five-days. The weekend box office in review for 07/19/09.

The List...

$80 million for Wednesday and Thursday, then $79.4 million from Fri-Sun. $159.6 million for five-days. The prurient 'I heart Alan Rickman' fan club cannot be stopped. I bet Tim Roth weeps into his breakfast each and every morning (I sincerely hope that choosing Planet of the Apes over Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone was an artistic choice).

OK, before we get into discussions about front loading and what the total vs the opening day means for the film in the long run, let's get some stuff out of the way right now. The sixth Harry Potter picture had the second-biggest five-day opening weekend in history, behind last month's Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (and, let's be honest, the $200 million five-day figure for Transformers 2 is, as Air America radio host Stephanie Miller would say, a 'lying sack of crap') . In many ways, this is a similar situation to May, 2002, where the unexpectedly huge opening weekend of Spider-Man ($114m in three days) dampened the huzzahs for the otherwise fantastic four-day $110m gross of Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones. The sixth film of a long-running franchises just set a franchise record by about $20 million. And it achieved its second-best five-day opening weekend without the IMAX advantage and with the handicap of discounted kids-ticket prices. This is a fantastic result, and it means that the franchise is likely to become the first sequel of this series to reach the $300 million mark. By any rational, plausible standard, this is a gangbusters opening weekend for arguably the biggest cinematic franchise in film history. With this weekend, the franchise has surpassed $1.5 billion in the US. That's with two more movies left, plus likely another $100-175 million left for part 6. Oh, and part 6 ended its first weekend with $396 million in the international bank, which is a record worldwide opening figure.

So, having said that, it's a little petty to discuss any minor issues like 'front loading' or 'gee, it had the worst multiplier of any five-day release in history' ("Once again Harry, we ask too much of you."). So I'll make this quick and move on. The movie has an all-time low multiplier for a five-day weekend release: 2.74x (that's the kind of multiplier that you see for three-day weekends). The film did over 50% of its five-day business in the first two days. Let me repeat... it made less over the three-day weekend portion than it did over the first two days (that also might be a first). It grossed 36% of its overall weekend total on its first day. Heck, it grossed 14% of its total in the first four hours or so (re - $22 million in midnight screenings). For whatever reason, this sixth Harry Potter film was front loaded in a way that you usually only see in films that people don't like. Yes, this year has been pretty terrible for hardcore weekend front loading (Friday the 13th, Watchmen, Bruno, etc) which is almost always followed by an epic second-weekend plunge (more on Bruno below). But the reviews have been near perfect (my 'B' has been treated as a pan by comparison) and the word of mouth, while not on-fire, hasn't been the sort to cause any damage to the long term prospects.

So, as troubling as these numbers appear on the surface, this may be the rare case where hard-core front loading means nothing in regards to the audience response and/or long term domestic prospects. Order of the Phoenix (the only other five-day opening weekend for which to compare to the Potter series) did 2.1x its five day business by the end of its domestic run. Let's assume that the film plays a little faster being yet another sequel, and let's assume that the IMAX premiere in 1.5 weeks doesn't give the picture a third-weekend boost, a 2x multiplier would still be a franchise high of $318 million (the original chapter, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, ended with $317.5 million). In order to cross the $300 million mark, it needs only to gross 1.88x its five-day number. And for those who were hoping that Harry Potter would slaughter Transformers 2, have heart. Its worldwide total after five-days is already over half of Transformers 2's very impressive current $796 million total. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince likely be the second-biggest worldwide hit of 2009 by just the end of next week. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, with $363 million and rising, is sure to win the domestic crown for the summer (and for the year, unless James Cameron's Avatar really does reinvent the wheel), but never underestimate the overseas might of Harry Potter.

Speaking of worldwide wonders, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs has very quietly amassed $581 million worldwide (#2 for 2009) and has already surpassed $152 million in the US by its 19th day. Down just 34% in weekend three, this second sequel is well ahead of the first film at day 19 ($122 million), and it's neck and neck with Ice Age: The Meltdown, but it's making a bit more per day. Expect this to cross $200 million by the end, and possibly $800 million globally. Plans are already in the works for Ice Age 4, and it seems like a no-brainer at this point (it will join Shrek Goes Fourth as the only theatrical animated franchise to make it to a fourth chapter). Somewhat shockingly, the domestically mighty Star Trek ($253 million in the US) has stumbled overseas, now stuck at $376 million, behind Night at the Museum 2 and Angels and Demons (the latter is about $25 million away from the half-billion mark). Point being, for all the justified rejoicing, the Star Trek reboot will still depend on DVD/Blu Ray sales to actually make a profit. Fortunately, the series is a reliable long-term player in the home video realm (and, who are we kidding, the sequel is going to be an absolute monster).

The big 'holy crap' story was the colossal 72% drop for Bruno. Dropping from $30.6 million to $8.3 million, this is the second-biggest second-weekend drop for any movie opening over $20 million (Friday the 13th plunged 81% earlier this year from a $40 million start). We can all hem and haw about what this means other than that the film just wasn't very well liked, but the picture will still make it to at least $65-70 million in the US alone. Universal picked this up for just $42.5 million, and I'd imagine the much-talked about picture will rent quite well. Yes, this is an absolute collapse and yes it's a little embarrassing for Universal, but the picture will make quite a bit of money regardless (worldwide, it's already at $74 million). Also very much worth noting, The Hangover dropped another mere 16% for a new domestic total of $235 million. That puts it as the third-highest grossing R-rated film of all time (not adjusted for inflation). Alas, it will likely climb no further up the list. Ahead of it are The Matrix Reloaded at $281 million and The Passion of the Christ at $371 million. The Proposal also dropped a meager 21%, so its new total is $128 million. Public Enemies ended weekend three with $79 million, so it'll likely limp to $100 million and then drop dead (again, Michael Mann movies are reliable long term renters).

Other news is the stunningly quiet box office run of Cameron Diaz's Her Sister's Keeper. Opening directly against Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, this melodrama has crossed the $40 million mark and may just make it to $50 million. And, since Warner Bros. didn't spend $80 million on this one (unlike State of Play or Duplicity), this will be a very profitable $30 million-budgeted example of 'the disappearing adult drama'. Finally, the top-ten was nearly invaded by two very limited release pictures. At number twelve, we have the Joseph Gordon Levitt and Zooey Deschanel romance 500 Days of Summer. It pulled in $838,000 on just 27 screens for a scorching $31,000 per screen average. Just below it is the fourth limited-release weekend of The Hurt Locker. It pulled in another $764,000 from 90 venues. It goes wide next weekend, and any action junkie that doesn't check it out is an idiot.

Tune in next weekend when the Katherine Heigl/Gerard Butler romantic comedy The Ugly Truth squares off against Walt Disney's G-Force (an action film with guinea pigs... why didn't someone do that sooner?). In other words, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince will once again sit atop the box office. For a day-by-day analysis of Harry Potter's box office run, read about Tuesday at 12:01, Wednesday, and Thursday. See how the sixth Harry Potter film stacks up against other parts 6. Check out my review of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, as well as a look at what happened on this weekend last year (hint... it involved bats and broken records). For all this and more, make Mendelson's Memos a daily stop.

Scott Mendelson

Friday, July 17, 2009

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince grosses $22 million on Thursday.

According to Warner Bros, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince grossed $22 million on its second full day. That's a pretty harsh drop of about 62% from its massive $58.1 million Wednesday. However, for what it's worth, when you take out the $22.2 million in midnight showings, the normal day-to-day drop is a more reasonable 49% drop. In two days, the sixth Potter picture has grossed $80 million, surpassing Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country as the highest-grossing sixth chapter in a continious franchise. Still, the obvious frontloading is slightly disturbing for longterm playability. At a glance, this appears to be the ninth-biggest two-day gross in history. The two-day totals that are larger are: The Dark Knight ($114m), Spider-Man 3 ($111m), Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest ($100m), Pirates of the Carribean: At World's End ($93m), Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen ($91m), Shrek the Third, Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith ($83.5m), and Spider-Man ($83m). Obviously, the full weekend story will be known by tomorrow morning.

Scott Mendelson

Whip It! trailer


While the narrative seems relatively paint-by-numbers, I'm pleased to see a female-driven movie that isn't primarily about snagging a guy. It's good to see Daniel Stern again on the big screen, as he's a better actor than he's given credit for. Considering the vast body of work that Drew Barrymore has produced, I'm shocked that she hasn't directed her own movie until now. Between 1996 (Scream) and 2005 (Fever Pitch), she was the one of the most consistently bankable female stars in the industry, with a solid run of moderately budgeted mid-range hits (The Wedding Singer, Ever After, Never Been Kissed, etc). I still to this day believe that the otherwise solid Fever Pitch was ruined by real life, as the tacked-on finale of the Red Sox actually winning the World Series completely negated the whole point of the movie. Nobody markets and nurtures quirky stuff like this better than Fox Searchlight, so I'd imagine that this will be a solid mainstream hit when it opens on October 9th.

Scott Mendelson

Thursday, July 16, 2009

The second Sherlock Holmes trailer. It's still IN THE EXTREME!


I wrote about the silliness of the first trailer when it debuted in mid-May, and this seems to be much more of the same. It still feels quite a bit pandering to the young-ins. In other words, it's Sherlock Holmes, but in the EXTREME!

Scott Mendelson

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince: $58.1 million on opening Wednesday.

It's not a record, but the sixth Harry Potter picture scored $58.1 million yesterday. That's the fourth-biggest single day of all-time. Ahead of it are The Dark Knight ($67 million), Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen ($62 million), and Spider-Man 3 ($59 million). It should be noted that this is the biggest day for any movie that wasn't opening on IMAX screens on the same day as the 35mm release. As we all know, IMAX was the main casualty of a last-minute release date change, when Warner Bros. moved the Harry Potter sequel from November 2008 to July, 2009. It now seems that losing that IMAX boost may have cost the film a shot at various box office records. Although I'm sure Warner Bros. isn't complaining.

Two years ago this weekend, Harry Potter and the Order of the Pheonix opened to $44 million on its maiden Wednesday. It made $12 million of that total (27%) from midnight screenings. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince grossed $22.2 million from midnight showings, which gave it a whopping 38% of its entire first-day total. Of course, Harry Potter 5 had the most frontloaded five-day opening weekend that I can find on record, grossing 31.6% of its entire opening weekend in just that first Wendesday (that's a 3.16x multiplier). That fifth Potter film plummeted 59% on its second day. So, given the obviously more frontloaded nature of this sixth film, we shouldn't be shocked by a drop as high as 65% for today.

As for where the film goes from here, that won't be particularly clear until Saturday morning. If the film has the same multiplier as part V, then it ends Sunday with a fantastic $185 million five-day total (even a mere 3x multiplier would be $175 million for the sprint). It should be noted, as the sixth Potter film brushes up against this record or that record, that the film not only lacks the now common IMAX advantage, but (compared to The Dark Knight or Transformers 2) far more of its ticket purchases are theoretically at the discounted childrens' price rate. Regardless, this is a fantastic performance, especially for a sixth film in a franchise. In one day, it's now the second-highest grossing 'part 6' in box office history (or third if you count whichever Star Wars film is the sixth chapter, if you don't count them that as two separate trilogies). As we speak, it has likely surpassed Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country's $74 million domestic take as the highest-grossing out-and-out fifth sequel in history (take that Freddy's Dead!). Not bad for a day's work.

Scott Mendelson

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