|
THE
animated telling of Beowulf, who rids a Danish
kingdom of the feared beast Grendel, slew the box office
over the weekend, giving a huge boost to 3D films in the
process.
The
Paramount Pictures release earned $28.1 million in its
opening weekend—40 percent of which came from special 3D
showings in regular theaters and on Imax screens.
The film
did $8 million in ticket sales on 638 screens equipped
with technology from RealD, which uses a special
reflective screen and polarized lens glasses that
moviegoers can take as a souvenir. Theater owners were
able to charge about $2 extra for the 3D showing.
The film
also sold $3.6 million worth of tickets on 84 Imax
screens showing the film using their own 3D technology.
“Twenty
percent of the screens produced 40 percent of the
gross,” Paramount general sales manager Don Harris said
Sunday.
The
film, from director Robert Zemeckis, used
performance-capture technology to render lifelike images
of its stars Ray Winstone and Angelina Jolie.
“If this
isn’t a mandate on the popularity and viability of 3D, I
don’t know what is,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president
of box-office tracker Media By Numbers. Studios are
planning even more animated and live-action films in 3D
as they try to lure audiences back into multiplexes.
This
week’s top 12 films grossed 29-percent less than the top
12 in the same weekend last year. Ticket sales were also
off 3 percent from last week.
Attendance has been down eight of the past nine
weekends, according to Media By Numbers. But studio
officials said Sunday they expected a slate of family
films to gain steam during the extended Thanksgiving
holiday and into December.
The
animated family film Bee Movie, written by Jerry
Seinfeld, had the second-highest gross of the weekend
with $14.3 million in ticket sales, bringing its total
after three weeks to $98.8 million. The release by
DreamWorks Animation has been hovering in the top two
spots at the box office since it opened.
The
fantasy tale Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium, from
20th Century Fox, opened in fifth place with $10
million. The movie stars Dustin Hoffman and Natalie
Portman in a story of an eccentric who owns a toy store
with a life of its own.
The
other film opening over the weekend, Love in the Time
of Cholera, from New Line, debuted in 10th place
with $1.9 million.
****
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at US
and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers Llc. |