First rule of Horrorthon is: watch horror movies. Second rule of Horrorthon is: write about it. Warn us. Tempt us. The one who watches the most movies in 31 days wins. There is no prize.
Monday, June 21, 2010
Toy Story 3 kills at the box office while Jonah Hex bombs big-time
From ew [excerpt], It may not have reached infinity and beyond, but Toy Story 3 has broken records with its Father’s Day weekend debut. The G-rated movie starring everyone’s favorite Pixar characters Buzz Lightyear and Cowboy Woody grossed an estimated $109 million, earning the status of Pixar’s highest-grossing opening weekend ever. It helped that Toy Story 3 bowed in more than 2,000 3-D locations, a number that accounted more than 50 percent of its gross. Its IMAX numbers were also solid: The film earned 8 percent of its total from the 180 large-screen theaters. The movie generated a 99 percent positive rating from review collector site Rotten Tomatoes and an A from exit pollster CinemaScore. The animated flick also helped boost the box office more than 30 percent over this weekend last year, when The Proposal debuted to $33 million.
The story is far different for the only other new wide release, Jonah Hex. In fact, the PG-13 western actioner starring Josh Brolin was wholeheartedly rejected by audiences, grossing a paltry $5 million for an eighth place finish at the box office. It will likely go down as the biggest disappointment of the summer, one that’s surely not going to help the careers of either Brolin or costar Megan Fox. Audiences gave it a C+ as indicated by CinemaScore.
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4 comments:
Five million? Oh, SNAP. Snappity snap snap.
Apparently the worst DC comics movie opening since Steel in 1997.
Oh, poor DC. I don't know if they'll ever crack the movie code -- except for Batman of course, which just makes it worse. I bet when the DC movie execs go home at night, they see tiny Batmans lurking in the shadows saying "come ahhhn, it can be done... what's your problem?"
It's their own damn fault. DC comics has been owned by Warner Communications since the early '70s, and yet Warner still doesn't know what to do with their intellectual property.
Even the "tent poles": I mean, Batman and Superman give you eleven Warner Bros. movies, of which, what, three are any good?
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