Disturbia leads US box office to 7-month low
Andy Jones  |  by www.stuff.co.nz. All rights reserved. 16.07 | 23:24

LOS ANGELES: The teen thriller Disturbia led the North American box office for a third weekend, as another slew of lowly new releases tried to get a toehold before next week's release of Spider-Man 3, the first big film of the lucrative summer moviegoing season.
Disturbia, a low-budget homage to Alfred Hitchcock's nosy-neighbor thriller Rear Window, sold $US9.1 million ($NZ12.

2 million) worth of tickets in the three days beginning Friday, distributor Paramount Pictures said on Sunday. It's the lowest tally for a No. 1 movie since The Covenant earned $US8.

9 million in the second weekend of September 2006. The teen ghost drama The Invisible opened at No. 2 this weekend with just $US7.

6 million, while the Nicolas Cage action movie Next debuted at No. 3 with $US7.2 million.

Both were roughly in line with modest expectations. Also new were the action movie The Condemned at No. 9 with $US4.

0 million, and the comedy Kickin' It Old Skool at No. 11 with $US2.8 million.

Sales for the top 12 films came in at just $US63 million, down 30 per cent from the year-ago weekend, according to tracking firm Media by Numbers. It was the lowest tally since the third weekend of September 2006 ($US61 million). The situation should be considerably different next weekend, when Sony Corp.

opens Spider-Man 3. The previous film in the superhero franchise earned $88 million during its first weekend in 2004. Disturbia, starring Shia LaBeouf, has earned $US52.

2 million after three weekends, and gives Viacom Inc-owned Paramount a five-weekend run at No. 1. This feat was last achieved in November/December 2004 with the Walt Disney Co pair of The Incredibles and National Treasure.

Paramount kicked off its run with the comedy Blades of Glory, which slipped two places to No. 5 with $US5.2 million, and has earned $US108.

1 million to date. The Invisible stars Justin Chatwin as a seemingly dead teen stuck in a ghostly limbo. The Disney release was directed by David Goyer, the filmmaker behind the Blade franchise.

In Next, Cage plays a Las Vegas magician who tries to stop a terrorist plot, aided by his ability to see two minutes into the future. The Paramount Pictures release was directed by Lee Tamahori of Die Another Day fame. Next is the latest film in a hugely variable career for Cage.

The Oscar winner was last in theaters with the surprise hit Ghost Rider, which opened to $US45.4 million in February. Condemned, released by Lionsgate, stars wrestling hero Steve Austin as a death row convict who must fight for his freedom in a reality TV style competition.

Lionsgate is a unit of Lions Gate Entertainment Corp Old Skool, from closely held Yari Film Group, stars Jamie Kennedy as a 12-year-old boy in the body of a grown man after emerging from a two-decade coma.

Read more on by www.stuff.co.nz. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Spider Man, Old Skool, Paramount Pictures
Related news
  • Ridley Scott To Direct Angry Russell Crowe Nottingham Flick
    Justin Henine-Hardenne

    May 1st, 2007 at 16:30 by Stuart Heritage When Ridley Scott and Russell Crowe made Gladiator together they caused a sensation - and now they re planning to try and repeat the success with bloodthirsty ancient Rome replaced by a damp forest in the Eas...

  • 'Disturbia' Earns $9.1M As Spidey Looms
    Andy Jones

    LOS ANGELES - Movie-goers continued to keep their eyes on the Peeping Tom thriller "Disturbia," which fended off a weak batch of newcomers to remain No. 1 for the third straight weekend with $9.1 million...

  • 'Disturbia' on top but Spider-Man looms
    Sammy King

    Movie-goers continued to keep their eyes on the Peeping Tom thriller Disturbia , which fended off a weak batch of newcomers to remain No. 1 for the third straight weekend with $9.1 million (all figures U.S.)...

  • PG-13? You're kidding!
    Howard Hughes

    Freed, who splits his time between the hallways of Antioch's Kaiser Hospital and a private practice in Lafayette, feels so strongly about the "don't-trust-the-ratings" issue, he addressed the American Academy of Pediatrics last month...

  • So you wanted a good movie? Next.
    Penny Ditch

    In Next , Nicolas Cage s character can see the future and alter it by his subsequent decisions. Sadly, Cage himself must lack this talent. Otherwise he never would have signed on for Next . Sorry, fantasy fans...

Post comments
Name
Place
3 + 8 =
Comments