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Vampire film ‘30 Days’ wins Box Office bloodbath
Dean Goodman
LOS ANGELES—The new vampire thriller “30 Days of Night” took a
commanding early lead at the North American box office on Saturday,
while the serious dramas “Gone Baby Gone,” “Rendition” and “Things We
Lost in the Fire” were on track for disastrous debuts.
“30 Days of Night,” which revolves around a vampire invasion of an
Alaskan town shrouded in 24-hour darkness, earned about $6.25 million on
its first day of business Friday, according to data issued on Saturday
by box office tracking firm Box Office Mojo (http://www.boxofficemojo.com).
The film’s distributor, Columbia Pictures, predicted the film would end
up with a three-day tally of about $15 million, in line with industry
forecasts before it opened. Columbia is a unit of Sony Corp. Incumbent
champ, “Why Did I Get Married?” was second on Friday with about $3.4
million. Based on its trajectory last weekend, writer/director/actor
Tyler Perry’s romantic comedy-drama should tally about $9.5 million in
its second round. The film was released by Lionsgate, a unit of Lions
Gate Entertainment Corp.
As for the other new releases, Box Office Mojo estimated Miramax Films’
crime thriller “Gone Baby Gone” opened at No. 6 with $1.9 million, New
Line Cinema’s suspense drama “Rendition” at No. 9 with $1.4 million, and
Paramount-DreamWorks’ domestic tragedy “Things We Lost in the Fire” at
No. 15 with $505,000.
Fox sports movie spoof “The Comebacks” beat them all, coming in at No. 5
with $2.1 million, although it played on more screens. Industry pundits
had expected most of the five new releases to reach $10 million for the
weekend — a figure that only “30 Days of Night” is likely to reach. But
a DreamWorks spokesman said the studio had been hoping only for a $3
million to $4 million weekend for “Things We Lost in the Fire.” Based on
Friday’s haul, he expected the Benicio Del Toro-Halle Berry vehicle
would come in at $1.6 million to $1.7 million. While obviously a
disappointment, he noted that it cost a modest $16 million to make, and
that the Oscar-winning stars got great reviews. |