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Borat still
big at worldwide Box Office
From David Germain
LOS
ANGELES—A make-believe son of the glorious nation of Kazakhstan
continues to rule the American box office. Sacha Baron Cohen’s “Borat:
Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of
Kazakhstan” took in $29 million to remain the No. 1 movie for a second
straight weekend, distributor 20th Century Fox said Sunday. “Borat”
raised its 10-day total to $67.8 million.
The top three movies remained unchanged from the previous weekend, with
Disney’s “The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause” still in second place
with $16.9 million and the Paramount-DreamWorks animated tale “Flushed
Away” in third with $16.7 million.
Sony’s Will Ferrell comedy “Stranger Than Fiction” debuted as the best
of the weekend’s newcomers, placing fourth with $14.1 million. Ferrell
plays a meek tax auditor suddenly able to hear the voice of a narrator
(Emma Thompson) chronicling his life and impending death.
While 20th Century Fox could crow about “Borat,” the studio’s Russell
Crowe-Ridley Scott reunion “A Good Year” flopped, coming in at No. 10
with $3.8 million. “A Good Year” was a departure for the star and
director of “Gladiator,” a soft romance with Crowe as a London
investment shark seduced by the laid-back life at a French vineyard he
inherits.
The movie generally was panned by critics, and audiences apparently were
not willing to accept broody actor Crowe in a romantic lead, said Bruce
Snyder, head of distribution for 20th Century Fox.
Audiences were willing to accept Cohen as Borat, the Kazakh TV
journalist he originated on “Da Ali G Show,” who jumps to the big screen
in a mock documentary about his journey across America.
Crudely funny and raucously satiric, “Borat” was a surprise winner at
the box office with a $26.5 million opening weekend, even though it
played in only 837 theatres, fewer than one-fourth the number of cinemas
for “The Santa Clause 3” and “Flushed Away.”
Some box-office analysts had questioned whether 20th Century Fox missed
the boat by launching “Borat” in so few theatres, saying the movie could
have rung up millions more on opening weekend if it had gone wider.
But Snyder said the buzz from the movie’s huge debut proved a great
prelude to wider release in its second weekend, when it expanded to
2,566 theatres.
“When a picture takes off like this, you can do it any way you want and
you can’t screw it up, quite honestly, when a picture becomes a part of
the culture like this,” Snyder said.
Expanding nationwide after two weekends in limited release, Paramount
Vantage’s drama “Babel” was No. 6 with $5.65 million. With an ensemble
cast that includes Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett, “Babel” traces the
repercussions of a shooting in the African desert on families around the
globe.
Sarah Michelle Gellar’s supernatural thriller “The Return” opened weakly
with $4.8 million to come in at No. 8. Released by Focus Features, the
movie was not screened beforehand for critics, generally a sign the
distributor expects bad reviews.
MGM’s “Harsh Times,” a gritty street drama starring Christian Bale and
Freddy Rodriguez, also had a poor debut of $1.8 million, finishing out
of the top 10.
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. “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious
Nation of Kazakhstan,” $29 million.
2. “The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause,” $16.9 million.
3. “Flushed Away,” $16.7 million.
4. “Stranger Than Fiction,” $14.1 million.
5. “Saw III,” $6.6 million.
6. “Babel,” $5.65 million.
7. “The Departed,” $5.2 million.
8. “The Return,” $4.8 million.
9. “The Prestige,” $4.6 million.
10. “A Good Year,” $3.8 million. |