|
Halloween remake should scare up Box Office lead
Gregg Kilday
LOS ANGELES—The calendar might say Labor Day, but holiday weekend
moviegoers in North America are just as likely to be celebrating
Halloween — or, make that “Halloween,” Rob Zombie’s remake of the 1978
slasher movie. While the current film, the eighth to be spun off from
John Carpenter’s original “Halloween,” appears to be jumping the gun
holidaywise, it’s just one of a trio of new wide releases that will bid
for the attention of younger males while the rest of the family is off
celebrating summer’s end.
Shock-rocker Zombie, who cut his teeth as a director on “House of 1000
Corpses” and “The Devil’s Rejects,” has gone back to Carpenter’s
original tale of knife-wielding mental institution escapee Michael Myers
and written and directed a movie that is as much prequel (with a look at
Myers’ horrific childhood) as a remake. The new “Halloween” — starring
Malcolm McDowell as shrink Dr. Loomis, Scout Taylor-Compton as baby
sitter Laurie Strode and Tyler Mane as the adult Michael Myers — will be
aiming for a $20 million haul during the four-day weekend, which would
put it in first position. It comes from the Weinstein Co’s Dimension
Films banner.
Focus Features’ Rogue Pictures label already has gotten a start on the
weekend with its martial arts movie parody “Balls of Fury,” which opened
Wednesday, taking in an estimated $1.7 million during its first day.
Directed by “Reno 911!” alumnus Robert Ben Garant and starring Dan
Fogler, a Tony winner for Broadway’s “The 25th Annual Putnam County
Spelling Bee,” and Christopher Walken as the movie’s archvillian Feng,
the comedy is set improbably in the pingpong underworld. Reviewers have
not been kind, though that’s probably immaterial, will probably find
itself in the $11 million-$13 million range for the four-day weekend. If
it checks in at the high end of that range, then it could find itself
jockeying with the third weekend of two-week champ “Superbad” to claim
the second slot overall.
20th Century Fox is launching “Death Sentence,” starring Kevin Bacon as
a father who seeks vigilante justice after his son his killed in a gang
initiation. Directed by James Wan (“Saw”), the film is likely to find
itself in the middle of the pack, on one side or the other of the $5
million mark for the four days. In a bid to attract Latino moviegoers,
Lionsgate is introducing “Ladron que roba a ladron,” a Spanish-language
film directed by Joe Menendez, in 340 theatres. The heist movie has been
described as a Spanish “Ocean’s Thirteen,” but its weekend haul will be
limited by its modest rollout. |