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Clooney sports comedy fumbles ball at Box
Office
Peter
David
LOS ANGELES—George Clooney’s screwball comedy “Leatherheads” failed to
open in the top spot at the weekend box office in North America, coming
in at No. 2 behind reigning champ “21,” according to preliminary data
issued on Saturday. “Leatherheads” sold $4.54 million worth of tickets
during its first day in theatres on Friday, distributor Universal
Pictures said. The General Electric Co-owned studio forecast a three-day
haul of $13.845 million.
Box office pundits had expected a No. 1 opening, with sales in the mid-
to high-teen millions for the Friday-to-Sunday period. The gambling
drama “21” earned $5.1 million on Friday, and should pull in about $15
million for the weekend, said Sony Corp-owned distributor Columbia
Pictures. Updated estimates will be issued on Sunday, followed by final
data on Monday. Clooney, 46, directed and stars in “Leatherheads,” a
farce set in the early days of American professional football. He claims
he also rewrote much of the script. But his request for credit was
denied by the Writers Guild of America, and Clooney resigned as a voting
member in protest.
Critics have savaged the film, particularly the script. According to
Rotten Tomatoes (http://www.rottentomatoes.com), a Web site that
aggregates reviews, only 36 percent of top critics liked the film.
Universal said “Leatherheads” cost about $58 million to make. Renee
Zellweger and John Krasinski also star. Despite his fame and fortune,
Clooney is a risky box office bet. Recent films such as “Michael
Clayton,” “The Good German,” “Intolerable Cruelty” and “Solaris” failed
to find a wide audience. Clooney’s biggest success was with the 2001
caper “Ocean’s Eleven” and its two sequels, in which he co-starred with
heavyweights like Brad Pitt, Matt Damon and Julia Roberts. |