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News

Weekend Box Office: April 15 – 17

#1 Rio from Fox debuts at #1 with an opening weekend gross of $39.2 million in 3826 theaters. Budget was $90 million.

#2 Scream 4 from Dimension debuts at #2 with an opening weekend gross of $18.6 million in 3305 theaters. Budget was $40 million.

#3 Hop from Universal drops from #1 to #3 with a weekend gross of $10.7 million (-49.7%) in 3608 theaters (-8). Total gross to date is $82.1 million. Budget was $63 million.

#4 Hanna from Focus drops from #2 to #4 with a weekend gross of $7.282 million (-41.1%) in 2545 theaters (+10). Total gross to date is $23.2. Budget was $30 million.

#5 Soul Surfer from TriStar drops from #4 to #5 with a weekend gross of $7.268 million (-31.4%) in 2214 theaters (no change). Total gross to date is $19.8 million. Budget was $18 million.

#6 Arthur from Warner Brothers drops from #3 to #6 with a weekend gross of $6.7 million (-44.7%) in 3276 theaters (no change). Total gross to date is $22.1 million. Budget was $40 million.

Rounding out the top 12 are:

#7 Insidious drops from #5 to #7 with a weekend gross of $6.7 million (-28.0%) in 2233 theaters (-186). Total gross to date is $35.8 million. Budget was $1.5 million.

#8 Source Code drops from #7 to #8 with a weekend gross of $6.2 million (-28.2%) in 2557 theaters (-414). Total gross to date is $36.8 million. Budget was $32 million.

#9 Your Highness from Universal drops from #6 to #9 with a weekend gross of $4.0 million (-57.1%) in 2772 theaters (+3). Total gross to date is $16.0 million. Budget was $49.9 million.

#10 Limitless drops from #8 to #10 with a weekend gross of $3.6 million (-33.0%) in 1885 theaters (-770). Total gross to date is $69.5 million. Budget was $27 million.

#11 The Conspirator debuts at #11 with an opening weekend gross of $3.5 million in 707 theaters. Budget was $25 million.

#12 The Lincoln Lawyer drops from #10 to #12 with a weekend gross of $2.8 million (-32.6%) in 1702 theaters (-718). Total gross to date is $50.4 million. Budget was $40 million.

The combined gross of the top 12 movies this weekend was $116.9 million (+13.8%).

New movies debuting in wide release this weekend include Water for Elephants, Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family and African Cats.

A note on “Gross”: On average, studios will earn approximately 55 percent of the final gross.

Sources:
Box Office Mojo

Categories
Back Seat Producers Season 06 Shows

BSP Episode 179: Unforgiven

Your Producers for this episode:

  • Tony
  • Tony
  • David
  • Darrell

This episode was recorded: April 13th, 2011

Categories
Text Reviews Theatrical Review

Theatrical Review: Super

I really was not planning to see this.  When I first saw the trailer to Super, it looked to me like it was going to this geek reference comedy with Rainn Wilson doing his thing from The Office, which had become extremely tired for me (I quit watching The Office a couple of seasons ago).  Even knowing that this was written and directed by James Gunn, who has previously made Slither which I had a good time with, wasn’t enough.

What made me want to see it was the recent review that Ignatiy Vishnevetsky and Christy Lemire gave it on Ebert Presents At The Movie. Their review convinced me that there was more to Super than what it’s trailer gave off, and it certainly intrigued me enough to want to seek this out when it came to St. Louis.  Awhile back, I’d posted on a messageboard about one of the original iterations of At The Movies going away, and it was followed by someone talking about the idea that the concept for this show was going the way of the dinosaur thanks to the internet and the barrage of reviews that you can get through that.  I thought that was just kind of sad.  Yeah, sure, you can get reviews all over the internet for everything, but they’re faceless, they have no sound or inflection and unless it’s someone you trust completely, they’re all over the map.  Of course, there’s a lot of good reviewers out there on the internet, who you know you can completely trust, just due to their consistency.  But with that said, nothing will ever really replace for me the idea of an actual television show devoted to it.  I can’t begin to tell you how many movies I was opened up to by actually seeing and hearing intelligent conversation thanks to the various iterations of At The Movies. Sorry for the long digression in the midst of this, but I can’t push Ebert Presents At The Movies enough.  You may not agree with every review in the end, but the one thing that it does have is a consistency of voice and intent.  To me anyway, that’s invaluable in deciding what to see.

But back to Super. This opened here in the St. Louis area this past weekend at one of my favorite theatres in town, the Tivoli.  When I heard it was coming, this got fast-tracked for me right away, thanks to the above.  I saw this last night, and think it’s one of the best movies that I’ve seen so far this year.

Frank D’Arbo is seemingly just your average ordinary guy who at the start of the film tells you about the only two perfect moments in his life- marrying his wife Sarah and pointing out to a policeman where a criminal went.  Frank’s devoted to Sarah, but Sarah’s got a past history of substance abuse.  That history begins to catch up to her when she gets involved with a slick guy named Jacques.  In a matter of days, Jacques leads Sarah back to her old ways, and soon she out-and-out leaves Frank, leaving him hopelessly distraught.  Frank’s at the end of his rope and doesn’t know what to do until a divine vision comes to him.  This vision inspires Frank to become a costumed crimefighter named The Crimson Bolt and from there, the inevitable hijinks ensue.

As I said above, writer/director James Gunn is best known for 2006’s Slither. But before that, he had a long association with Troma Studios, known for their low-budget, extremely over-the-top exploitation films.  A lot of Super is a flat-out salute to those movies, but there’s a lot more to this as well.  It’s really difficult to pin any sort of singular label on this movie.  On it’s surface, it looks like it’s going to be a broad comedy, when in it’s actually an extremely black comedy.  With Rainn Wilson’s presence, I at least originally had the feeling that he was going to be of one note, but he goes to some places emotionally that are extremely dark, so this could also carry the label of being a psychological investigation.  And then there’s the whole super-hero element that initially gets compared to Kick-Ass, but combined with other factors more puts this on the same plane with what I think Sucker Punch was trying to achieve.  The difference being that Super actually does achieve it.  The end result, to me anyway, actually has more in common with Taxi Driver more than anything else.

Oh, there’s certainly some broad comedy, and it’s not ineffective.  It’s also not what this will be known for, that gets overshadowed by the very dark overall tone and the extreme violence within.  The violence is quite graphic and feels “real” and that is certainly something to keep in mind if you decide to see this.  That factor alone is something that could be a huge turn-off for someone coming in and expecting this to be like what I’d originally thought it was going to be.

Gunn’s Troma roots are certainly on display in the shooting style.  The look of the film feels like there was a lot of guerilla filmmaking going on while shooting this, and it definitely works.  It’s authentic feel makes the evident darkness even more pronounced.

There’s even more to it than that.  Other highlights include a terrific animated opening sequence, a very Troma-esque way in which Frank gets his divine vision, and a great score from composer Tyler Bates.  I’d mentioned Sucker Punch above.  Sucker Punch does something with it’s ending that tries to flip the whole thing that just doesn’t work primarily due to just not being set-up that well.  Well, Super does the same sort of thing, but when it happens it’s not forced and it does still come back to Frank, making for quite the poignant ending.

The big revelation for me here though was Rainn Wilson.  This isn’t Dwight Shruite by any means.  Frank is off-balanced, to be sure, but he’s also, at least to me highly relatable.  He’s had his life turned upside-down, with one of his perfect moments tarnished.  He externalizes a lot of pain that I know I can certainly relate to.  Those scenes might at first seem a touch over-the-top, but I thought they were very honest and certainly made him to be a much more sympathetic character than what I had originally expected.

Liv Tyler plays Sarah, and Kevin Bacon plays Jacques.  At first, the big question looms, how does someone who looks like Liv Tyler get involved with a guy like Frank?  Another movie might be very superficial with something like this, but James Gunn actually goes there and tells you how.  Tyler shines in these scenes, and again, it feels honest.  Kevin Bacon is very slick and right off the bat you know that Jacques is going to be this sort of scum that everyone has come across in their lives in their own way.

Ellen Page plays Libby, a comic book store employee who helps Frank get on his track and later becomes his “kid” sidekick, Boltie.  I tend to think that Ellen Page is one of the best young actresses out there today and seeing her in Super further supports that.  As unbalanced as Frank is, there’s even darker stuff at work for Libby, she’s just not as cognizant of it as Frank is.  Page is quite good at subverting that making this part something that has more in common with the first movie I saw her in, Hard Candy.

The casting also includes some other nice touches.  Veteran actors Gregg Henry, Michael Rooker and Nathan Fillion (all also in Slither) have key roles here and play perfectly into Gunn’s big picture.  Other nice acting touches include William Katt (from TV’s The Greatest American Hero as an on-screen police officer and Rob Zombie as the voice of God.  Their appearances are really brief, but very nice winks to the intended audience.

Super is a terrific movie and just this extremely huge surprise.  It’s not for everyone, for instance if you’re a parent who’s seen the trailer and think that this will be something your children will enjoy, you just might want to hold off.  It’s dark tone and extreme violence could also be very off-putting to some, so I can’t give this a blanket recommendation.  But if you think you can get into the combination of blacker-than black comedy, psychological unbalance and a very big heart, then you might find something very special with Super.  I know I did.

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Back Seat Box Office Shows

Back Seat Box Office #30

Despite an old witch placing a curse on Tony’s equipment we pulled together and overcame to bring you this, our 30th episode.

Amongst the hosts Andrew and Jonathan are tied for first this week with 17 points while Tony is bringing up the rear with 15 points. Average scores for the first fifteen weeks of 2011 have Tony in first place with 20.13 points, Jonathan in second with 19.53 points and Andrew in third with 19.13 points.

Visit our scoreboard for a comprehensive list of results as well as an explanation of our scoring system. Play along at home, email or call your picks in before Friday night and get on the board.

New movies debuting in wide release this weekend include Rio and Scream 4.

Picks for the week:
Andrew

  1. Rio
  2. Scream 4
  3. Hop
  4. Hanna
  5. Soul Surfer

Jonathan

  1. Rio
  2. Scream 4
  3. Hop
  4. Hanna
  5. Arthur

Tony

  1. Rio
  2. Scream 4
  3. Hop
  4. Hanna
  5. Arthur

Got something to say? Head over the the Back Seat Producers forum and let us know what you think.

Categories
Back Seat Box Office BSBO Results Shows

Back Seat Box Office #29 Results and Voice Mail

Round 2 of our new Results and Voice Mail show.

What do you guys think?  Do you want to make this a show for BSP and BSBO?  Let us know.

Categories
News

Weekend Box Office: April 8 – 10

#1 Hop from Universal holds at #1 with a weekend gross of $21.2 million (-43.3%) in 3616 theaters (+37). Total gross to date is $67.7 million. Budget was $63 million.

#2 Hanna from Focus debuts at #2 with an opening weekend gross of $12.3 million in 2535 theaters. Budget was $30 million.

#3 Arthur from Warner Brothers debuts at #3 with an opening weekend gross of $12.2 million in 3276 theaters. Budget was $40 million.

#4 Soul Surfer from TriStar debuts at #4 with an opening weekend gross of $10.6 million in 2214 theaters. Budget was $18 million.

#5 Insidious from Film District drops from #3 to #5 with a weekend gross of $9.3 million (-29.4%) in 2419 theaters (+11). Total gross to date is $26.7 million. Budget was $1.5 million.

#6 Your Highness from Universal debuts at #6 with an opening weekend gross of $9.3 million in 2769 theaters. Budget was $49.9 million.

Rounding out the top 12 are:

#7 Source Code drops from #2 to #7 with a weekend gross of $8.6 million (-41.6%) in 2971 theaters (+10). Total gross to date is $28.2 million. Budget was $32 million.

#8 Limitless drops from #5 to #8 with a weekend gross of $5.4 million (-41.3%) in 2655 theaters (-183). Total gross to date is $64.1 million. Budget was $27 million.

#9 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules drops from #4 to #9 with a weekend gross of $4.7 million (-52.5%) in 2881 theaters (-288). Total gross to date is $45.3 million. Budget was $21 million.

#10 The Lincoln Lawyer drops from #6 to #10 with a weekend gross of $4.2 million (-37.3%) in 2420 theaters (-287). Total gross to date is $46.1 million. Budget was $40 million.

#11 Rango drops from #8 to #11 with a weekend gross of $2.3 million (-48.9%) in 2007 theaters (-1127). Total gross to date is $117.5 million. Budget was $135 million.

#12 Sucker Punch drops from #7 to #12 with a weekend gross of $2.1 million (-65.1%) in 1755 theaters (-1278). Total gross to date is $33.9 million. Budget was $82 million.

The combined gross of the top 12 movies this weekend was $102.7 million (-9.9%).

New movies debuting in wide release this weekend include Rio and Scream 4.

A note on “Gross”: On average, studios will earn approximately 55 percent of the final gross.

Sources:
Box Office Mojo

Categories
Back Seat Producers Season 06 Shows

BSP Episode 178: The Social Network

Categories
Text Reviews Theatrical Review

Theatrical Review: Hanna

Hanna is a 16-year old girl who lives with her father in the wilderness.  They’re totally cut off from everything, including not having electricity for their home.  That’s fine by Hanna’s father, a former secret agent named Erik Heller who’s purposely keeping Hanna from the rest of the world.  But one day, he knows that his girl will want to see the world around her, and because of that, he relentlessly trains her to be most deadly with both weapons and hand-to-hand combat.  The day has come, and Hanna wants to leave, but in order for her to truthfully go and deal with the world around her, she’ll first have to deal with the very thing that her father has been training her for, a ruthless CIA agent named Marissa Weigler.

Hanna is the latest movie from director Joe Wright, who has previously made movies like Atonement and Pride and Prejudice, neither of which I’ve seen, though after seeing Hanna I should probably re-consider that, even though I know they’re not along the same lines as Hanna, which at it’s core is an action film, and those aren’t.  That’s basically telling you that I enjoyed Hanna quite a bit.

As this starts, I sort’ve get the feeling that I’m seeing what I’d first expect to be what you might get if Lars von Trier made Batman, but as it progresses, it feels more along the lines of a deeper action film from director Luc Besson by way of the The Brothers Grimm.  Now The Brothers Grimm are very much an influence on this film, in both subtle and not so subtle ways.  I don’t necessarily know if Besson and von Trier are influences on Joe Wright, but as far as I’m concerned, if I’m using them to compare, I’m paying a huge compliment to Wright.

Hanna is terrifically shot and features some really nicely done set pieces.  It’s all punctuated by a first rate techno music score from The Chemical Brothers which really adds a little something extra to the whole thing.

That wouldn’t matter if you didn’t have a strong story and well-drawn characters to carry the whole thing, and fortunately Hanna has both.  Writers Seth Lockhead and David Farr pack quite a bit into this, not just giving us a strong action film but also a good coming-of-age story.  While there’s certainly elements of this that are things that we’ve seen done before, the way it’s all mixed together feels surprisingly fresh.

Saoirse Ronan plays Hanna and while I know she’s been in other movies (Atonement and Peter Jackson’s The Lovely Bones) this is my first big exposure to her.  She’s certainly a talent to watch and I know that upcoming she’ll be in The Hobbit.  Her Hanna is both resourceful and innocent, and her presence is quite remarkable.  Eric Bana plays her father Erik Heller, and Bana does a real nice job here with some great intensity and really gets to shine in a couple of key action set pieces.  Cate Blanchett plays Marissa and I think she’s just wonderful in this, obviously having a great time playing a villain.  Tom Hollander plays an outside operative, Isaacs, hired by Marissa to take care of Hanna, and like Blanchett, you can tell he’s having a great time with this part.

In addition, Jessica Barden, Peter Flemyng and Olivia Williams play members of a British family who Hanna comes across in her travels.  They expose her to a life that she really can’t have and really shine later in the film after Marissa has come into contact with them.

Hanna is really solid entertainment.  Though there are familiar elements, it’s all put together in a way that feels surprisingly fresh, to me, largely due to it’s use of The Brothers Grimm and a terrific score from The Chemical Brothers.  Cate Blanchett really shines in a terrific villainess part and Saorise Ronan is definitely a star in the making.  Don’t miss this one.

Categories
Back Seat Box Office Shows

Back Seat Box Office #29

Come listen to April Paul’s Day over at Ideology of Madness to hear what we’re talking about.

Jonathan comes in first this week with 20 points (20% old system), Tony is in second with 19 points (20% old system), and Andrew is in third 17 points (20% old system). Average scores for the first twelve weeks of 2011 still have Tony in first place with 20.5 points, Jonathan is in second with 19.71 points and Andrew is in third with 19.29 points.

Looking for an explanation of our scoring system? Check out our scoreboard here to find the answers you need. Play along at home, email or call your picks in before Friday night and get on the board.

New movies debuting in wide release this weekend include Arthur, Hanna, Soul Surfer and Your Highness.

Picks for the week:
Jonathan

  1. Hop
  2. Arthur
  3. Your Highness
  4. Hanna
  5. Source Code

Tony

  1. Hop
  2. Arthur
  3. Your Highness
  4. Source Code
  5. Hanna

Andrew

  1. Hop
  2. Arthur
  3. Your Highness
  4. Insidious
  5. Hanna

Got something to say? Head over the the Back Seat Producers forum and let us know what you think.

Categories
Back Seat Box Office BSBO Results Shows

Back Seat Box Office #28 Results and Voice Mail

Another experiment in the ever-evolving Back Seat Box Office Experience.

I’d love some feed back on this supplementary show.  Valuable?  Fun?  Crappy? Any feedback positive or negative is welcome!