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Borat headed for glorious US Box Office
From Steve Gorman
LOS
ANGELES—Borat may not be the biggest star of the U.S. multiplex this
weekend, but the fictional Kazakh TV reporter is getting huge buzz, rave
reviews and seems likely to “make benefit glorious box office” in the
long run.
“Borat,” starring British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen as the boorish,
anti-Semitic alter ego he introduced to U.S. audiences on cable
television’s “Da Ali G Show,” opened on Friday amid some of the most
intense media hype of any film this year.
Leading online ticketing service Fandango.com reported brisk business
for the film, whose full title is “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America
for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan.”
As of noon on Friday, “Borat” accounted for 73 percent of the agency’s
advance ticket sales, and in a poll, 96 percent of Fandango customers
said they planned to see the movie this weekend. Industry experts said
the faux documentary, featuring Cohen’s Borat character on a road trip
across the United States, would likely gross $8 million to $10 million
and maybe as much as $15 million this weekend, a tidy sum for a film
that cost only about $18 million to make.
That would make Cohen Britain’s hottest comedy import to the U.S. big
screen since Rowan Atkinson’s “Bean” in 1997.
With two other big-studio pictures opening in North America this
weekend, each in four times as many theatres, it will be tough for
“Borat” to debut at No. 1. But the film is easily expected to end up in
the top three or four.
“For a movie opening in fewer than 1,000 theatres, that’s impressive,”
said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracking service
Exhibitor Relations Inc. In a strategy calculated to build on strong
word of mouth expected for the film, distributor 20th Century Fox scaled
back its domestic release pattern to just 837 theatres and plans to
expand next weekend to about 2,000.
By comparison, “Snakes on a Plane,” another R-rated film that drew
tremendous advance hype, opened in over 3,500 theatres in August and
grossed $15.2 million its first weekend, dropping by nearly 60 percent
at the box office the following week.
TARGETED RELEASE
This weekend, “Borat” will compete with “The Santa Clause 3: The Escape
Clause” and animated adventure “Flushed Away,” opening in 3,458 and
3,707 theatres, respectively.
By limiting the size of “Borat’s” release, Fox is initially targeting
Cohen’s most devoted fans — especially young, male moviegoers most
likely to rush out in the first weekend and urge friends to see it,
analysts said.
Fox spokesman Jeffrey Godsick said early ticket sales for “Borat” were
“very strong” in all the major cities where it was showing, especially
New York and Los Angeles.
Fox also is capitalizing on overwhelmingly warm reviews for “Borat” — 95
percent of them positive, according to Web site rottentomatoes.com. The
film was helped by huge pre-release publicity from the protests of
Kazakh authorities outraged by Cohen’s portrait of their Central Asian
country as a backward nation of drunken misogynists and racists.
Forty-three percent of those polled by Fandango said the Kazakh
government’s complaints about “Borat” heightened their interest in the
movie, and 24 percent said they had not heard of Kazakhstan before. |