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Saw IV butchers competition at Box Office
Dean Goodman
LOS ANGELES—If it’s Halloween, it must be time for the “Saw” horror
franchise to scare up the top spot at the North American box office.
“Saw IV,” the latest instalment in the annual series about a sadistic
serial killer named Jigsaw, sold about $32.1 million in tickets during
the weekend, according to studio estimates issued on Sunday.
Opening at No. 2 was the Steve Carell comedy “Dan in Real Life,” with
$12.1 million. Last weekend’s champion, the vampire thriller “30 Days of
Night,” fell to No. 3 with $6.7 million.
“Saw IV,” opened about $1.5 million lower than its predecessor this time
last year, breaking a pattern that had seen each new instalment open
more strongly than the previous one. But most franchises are usually
running on fumes by the time the fourth iteration hits the screens, a
fate that evidently has yet to befall “Saw.”
Exit polling indicated that 89 percent of the film’s audience had seen
all three previous entries, a sign of “tremendous brand loyalty,” said
Steve Rothenberg, president of distribution at Lionsgate, which released
the film.
Additionally, 68 percent were aged under 25, about the same as with “Saw
III,” Rothenberg said. He attributed the films’ success to the
“creativity of the traps” that portend a grisly demise for their
victims.
The top grosser in the series is 2005’s “Saw II,” which finished with
$87 million after a $31.7 million start. “Saw III” took in $80.2 million
overall.
“Saw IV” marks the second chart-topper in three weeks for indie studio
Lionsgate, a unit of Lions Gate Entertainment Corp., following “Why Did
I Get Married?” Filmmaker Tyler Perry’s romantic comedy drama fell two
places to No. 5 with $6.3 million, taking its haul to $47.3 million.
“Dan in Real Life,” from Walt Disney Co.’s Touchstone Pictures, stars
Carell as a widowed family-advice columnist who falls for his brother’s
girlfriend, played by Juliette Binoche. Its opening was within
expectations, and Disney said it scored well in exit interviews. |