A low-budget and critically acclaimed movie with no stars and an unknown director managed to top the charts. District 9, the alien action pic produced by Peter Jackson and directed by the 29-year-old Neill Blomkamp — who shot the film in Johannesburg, South Africa, of all places – crushed the competition by grossing $37 million, according to early estimates. Audiences clearly enjoyed what they saw too: District 9 has already soared to #78 on IMDb’s top 250 movies list, although it’ll obviously drop some as the initial euphoria wears off.
Second place went to G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, which dropped 59% in its second weekend but still managed to recruit $22.5 million. The $175 million action movie should pass $100 million domestically by Monday. The Time Traveler’s Wife materialized into third place with $19.2 million in its debut weekend, proving that there is a market for watching Eric Bana disappear. Rounding out the top 5 were Julie & Julia (No. 4 with $12.4 million) and G-Force (No. 5 with $6.9 million), respectively.
Also opening wide was a trio of movies that failed to make a significant dent on the box office. The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard, a cars-salesmen comedy starring Jeremy Piven, barely registered on the mercury thermometer by earning $5.4 million. Ponyo, the 10th film by Japan’s animation auteur Hayao Miyazaki, grossed $3.5 million on 927 screens. While that amount represents Miyazaki’s best opening weekend in America, it’s still fish feed compared to Ponyo’s worldwide gross of $187 million. The music comedy Bandslam won’t be getting any requests for encores after making only $2.3 million from more than 2,000 screens — even the promise of seeing the “Taylor Lautner takes off his shirt” trailer of The Twilight Saga: New Moon couldn’t save the Vanessa Hudgens movie.
In limited release, the Jimmy Page/The Edge/Jack White music documentary It Might Get Loud opened promisingly, grossing $101,000 from just seven theaters. And (500) Days of Summer continues to cement its title as “the indie breakout of the summer” by charming $3 million more from moviegoers, bringing its total to $18 million so far.
Overseas, the weekend spoils went to “G.I. Joe,” which grossed an estimated $26.2 million in its second frame from 7,039 runs in 49 territories for a cume of $91.5 million and a worldwide total of $190.5 million in its first 10 days. Results ensure that Par has created another film franchise.
Twentieth Century Fox’s “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” made big headlines in jumping the $600 million mark overseas, only the second Fox film to do so after “Titanic.” For the weekend, “Ice Age” grossed $11.2 million from 6,500 screens in 66 markets for a foreign cume of $600.7 million and worldwide total of $791.6 million.
Warner Bros.’ “The Hangover,” the surprise blockbuster of the summer, crossed the $400 million mark worldwide as it grossed an estimated $8 million from 3,000 runs in 50 markets for a worldwide tally of $400.7 million.
Disney’s “Up” remained a steady winner overseas, grossing $10.6 million from 3,096 runs in 22 markets for a cume of $128 million and worldwide total of $415 million.
Mouse House also continues to score with romantic comedy “The Proposal,” which grossed $6.2 million for the weekend for a foreign cume of $103.6 million.
Sony opened “District 9″ in seven territories to strong results. Film grossed $7 million from 750 playdates in nine territories, led by Russia at $4.5 million. Ticket sales in Russia paced ahead of those for sci-fi pics “War of the Worlds” and “I Am Legend.”
In the U.S., “District 9″ performed at the top of its class, opening bigger than such sci-fi titles as “Minority Report,” which had mega talent wattage in Steven Spielberg and Tom Cruise, and last summer’s “The Happening,” starring Mark Wahlberg and helmed by M. Night Shyamalan.
Source: Variety
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