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Harry Potter dominates Box Office
Alicia Chang
LOS
ANGELES—The bespectacled boy wizard has worked his biggest box-office
magic to date. “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” grossed $101.4
million in its debut weekend, the best results yet for the franchise,
according to studio estimates released Sunday.
The latest Potter movie led a lineup that helped reverse the Hollywood
box-office slump, with the top 12 films raking in $171 million, up 19
percent from the same weekend last year when “National Treasure” was No.
1 with $35.1 million. “Goblet of Fire” was the fourth-best, three-day
opening weekend ever, behind “Spider-Man” at $114.8 million in 2002 and
“Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith” and “Shrek 2,” at $108
million apiece.
The fourth instalment of the adventures of Harry and his curious
classmates at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry is the
first Potter film to earn a PG-13 rating for its fantasy violence and
special effects. But that did not deter audiences. “The Potter franchise
is just irresistible to moviegoers,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president
of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. “The combination of the
Potter books and the love audiences have for the movies conspired a big
opening weekend.”
Debuting in second place was the Johnny Cash film biopic “Walk the
Line,” which took in $22.4 million. The film chronicles the early
musical career of Cash, played by Joaquin Phoenix, and also stars Reese
Witherspoon as Cash’s lifelong love, June Carter. Phoenix and
Witherspoon do their own singing. Disney’s computer-animated film
“Chicken Little,” which held the top spot last week, slipped to No. 3
with $14.8 million. Jennifer Anniston’s thriller “Derailed” ranked
fourth with $6.5 million and the sci-fi fantasy “Zathura: A Space
Adventure” rounded out the top five with $5.1 million.
Based on the best-selling books by J.K. Rowling, “Goblet of Fire”
follows 14-year-old Harry, who unwillingly competes against three older
wizards in a dangerous Triwizard Tournament. The movie features a
dramatic face-off between Harry and Lord Voldemort -
He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named - the dark warlock who killed Harry’s parents
and who tried to kill him when he was a baby.
Dan Fellman, head of distribution at Warner Bros., which released
“Goblet of Fire,” said the results exceeded the studio’s expectations.
The third Potter film, “Prisoner of Azkaban,” premiered last year at
$93.7 million.
“As the audience has gotten older in time, faithful readers of the
Potter books will remain faithful to the movies,” Fellman said.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian
theatres, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures will
be released Monday.
1. “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire,” $101.4 million
2. “Walk the Line,” $22.4 million
3. “Chicken Little,” $14.8 million
4. “Derailed,” $6.5 million
5. “Zathura,” $5.1 million
6. “Jarhead,” $4.8 million
7. “Get Rich or Die Tryin,” $4.4 million
8. “Saw II,” $3.9 million
9. “Legend of Zorro,” $2.3 million
10. “Pride and Prejudice,” $2.1 million. |