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‘Treasure’ finds $45m in Box Office gold
David Germain
LOS ANGELES—Nicolas Cage followed his secret treasure map to another
fortune at movie theaters. Cage’s “National Treasure: Book of Secrets,”
the Disney sequel to its 2004 hit, opened as the weekend’s No. 1 movie
with $45.5 million as Hollywood continued a holiday spree at the box
office, according to studio estimates Sunday. With Cage reprising his
role as a history buff on the hunt for a vanished fortune, the “National
Treasure” sequel outdid the original, which debuted with $35.1 million
on its way to a $173 million total.
The previous weekend’s top flick, Will Smith’s “I Am Legend,” slipped to
second place with $34.2 million, the Warner Bros. hit raising its 10-day
total to $137.5 million. The two action films led a crowded market
filled with new releases, among them Universal’s foreign-policy satire
“Charlie Wilson’s War,” starring Tom Hanks, Julia Roberts and Philip
Seymour Hoffman. Directed by Mike Nichols, “Charlie Wilson’s War”
debuted at No. 4 with $9.6 million. The absurdist romp follows an
unlikely trio — a congressman, a socialite and a scruffy CIA man — who
shaped the United States’ covert response to the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan.
Playing in just 1,249 theaters, about half as many as “Charlie Wilson’s
War,” the DreamWorks-Paramount musical “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber
of Fleet Street” did almost as much business, coming in at No. 5 with
$9.35 million. Warner Bros. produced a dud in “P.S. I Love You,” which
had a so-so No. 6 opening with $6.5 million. The movie stars Hilary
Swank as a widow whose husband arranged to send letters after his death
to inspire her to go on living.
The latest from the Judd Apatow comedy machine, Sony’s “Walk Hard: The
Dewey Cox Story,” was a surprise bomb, taking in just $4.1 million
despite good reviews praising its no-holds-barred humor and John C.
Reilly’s giddy performance. Produced and co-written by Apatow (“Knocked
Up”), the spoof of music biopics stars Reilly as a country rocker who
shoots to stardom and lives the ultimate artist’s life of excess and
self-indulgence.
With five new wide releases this weekend and two more opening Christmas
Day — the action-horror sequel “Alien vs. Predator: Requiem” and the
family flick “The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep” — Hollywood is
banking on the holiday week to provide a big finish for 2007. After a
sluggish fall, Hollywood business soared for the second-straight
weekend. The top 12 movies took in $153.5 million, up 41 percent from
the same weekend last year, according to box-office tracker Media By
Numbers. “The variety of films is really bringing out the audience,”
said Paul Dergarabedian, president of Media By Numbers. “People are
looking for all different types of movies, and everything is represented
here.”
Along with its domestic haul, the “National Treasure” sequel pulled in
$22.3 million overseas, mostly in Asia. The movie does not open in
Europe until February, but with London and Paris locations, it should
take in more overseas than the $173 million the first installment did,
said Mark Zoradi, president of Disney’s motion-picture group. |