In the seat:
- Scott
Recorded: 12/09/12
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In the seat:
Recorded: 12/09/12
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#1 Skyfall from Sony/Columbia rose from #2 to #1 with a gross of $10.8 million (-34.9%) in 3,401 theaters (-62). Total gross to date is $261.4 million. Budget was $200 million.
#2 Rise of the Guardians from Paramount rose from #3 to #2 with a gross of $10.4 million (-22.3%) in 3,639 theaters (-33). Total gross to date is $61.8 million. Budget was $145 million.
#3 The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 from Summit Entertainment fell from #1 to #3 with a gross of $9.2 million (-47.4%) in 3,646 theaters (-362). Total gross to date is $268.7 million. Budget was $120 million.
#4 Lincoln from Buena Vista held at #4 with a gross of $8.9 million (-33.3%) in 2,014 theaters (-4). Total gross to date is $97.3 million. Budget was $65 million.
#5 Life of Pi from 20th Century Fox held at #5 with a gross of $8.3 million (-31.4%) in 2,828 theaters (+18). Total gross to date is $60.9 million. Budget was $120 million.
#6 Playing for Keeps from FilmDistrict opened at #6 with a gross of $5.8 million in 2,837 theaters. Budget was unknown.
#7 Wreck-It Ralph from Buena Vista fell from #6 to #7 with a gross of $4.9 million (-30.1%) in 2,746 theaters (-341). Total gross to date is $164.4 million. Budget was $165 million.
#8 Red Dawn (2012) from FilmDistrict held at #8 with a gross of $4.2 million (-34.8%) in 2,754 theaters (-27). Total gross to date is $37.2 million. Budget was $65 million.
#9 Flight from Paramount held at #9 with a gross of $3.1 million (-30.1%) in 2,431 theaters (-172). Total gross to date is $86.2 million. Budget was $31 million.
#10 Killing Them Softly from Weinstein Company fell from #7 to #10 with a gross of $2.8 million (-58.8%) in 2,424 theaters. Total gross to date is $11.8 million. Budget was $15 million.
#11 Silver Linings Playbook from Weinstein Company held at #11 with a gross of $2.2 million (-29.7%) in 371 theaters. Total gross to date is $14 million. Budget was $21 million.
#12 Anna Karenina from Focus Features held at #12 with a gross of $1.5 million (-31.2%) in 422 theaters (+38). Total gross to date is $6.6 million. Budget was unknown.
The combined gross of the top 12 movies this weekend was $72.1 million.
Sources:
Box Office Mojo
Release date: 5/14/2010
Present Pictures
Directed and Written by
Produced by
Cast
Emma Caulfield
Michelle Borth
John Patrick Amedori
Desmond Harrington
The hosts review:
Your Producers for this episode were:
This episode was recorded: 11/28/2012
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As our movie starts, it’s 1959 and Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest is seeing it’s premiere to resounding success. As Hitchcock and his wife, Alma, are leaving the premiere, Hitchcock is asked about his age and maybe now should be the time when he steps down from directing as he goes out on a high. This sparks something within Hitchcock; an urge to re-invent himself with his next movie, though for the moment he’s stuck for what that next project will be. Hitchcock finds himself attracted to Robert Bloch’s newest book, Psycho which is all about the grisly case of mass murderer Ed Gein. He’s bound and determined to make this his next film, over objections from nearly everyone around him, including the head of Paramount Pictures. What follows is the story of how Hitchcock made Psycho and re-invented the horror genre, all while facing problems that he was starting to have with Alma.
That’s the nutshell premise to Hitchcock from director Sacha Gervasi. It’s a pretty good film overall that to me seems more at it’s best when it’s dealing with the making of Psycho than when it deals with Hitch’s and Alma’s personal situation (as well as Hitch’s obsession over his leading ladies).
I’ve not read the book this is based on (Stephen Rebello’s Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho) so it’s hard for me to say if the personal scenes between Hitch and Alma are actually accurate. They come off as more theatrically broad than the vision of Hitchcock that I personally have and just sort of seem very forced. There’s a scene that involves Hitch having his own frustrations, walking out to his swimming pool and seeing the mess that it had become. Hitch takes a net for cleaning the pool and starts to swing it around in a way that just comes off as cartoonish. Maybe this did actually happen, but for me it just sort of seems to force dramatic histrionics on the man. The movie places heavy importance on Alma’s contributions to Hitchcock’s career to the point where it almost seems to undermine Hitch’s own genius. For some, this might be right on the money, but for myself, it was more of a distraction more than anything else.
Even with that said, it’s still a pretty entertaining film, and Anthony Hopkins as Hitch and Helen Mirren as Alma do their best to elevate this specific material beyond the TV movie level. To me though, this is way more entertaining when it deals with the actual making of Psycho and scenes around this are real gems. Scenes showing how both writer Joseph Stefano (Ralph Macchio) and Anthony Perkins (James D’Arcy) got their jobs are absolutely terrific as are scenes that deal with such things as the infamous shower scene and Hitch’s dealings with Paramount to get the film made.
For the most part, I think Hopkins does a pretty decent job with the part (though my own first choice might’ve been to have someone like Paul Giamatti play the part). Hopkins really shines with scenes that have Hitch interacting with Janet Leigh (Scarlett Johansson) and Vera Miles (Jessica Biel), but more on them shortly. Mirren’s Alma, is a little more glamorous than what I’ve perceived the real Alma Reville to be. She seems more at home in the scenes that she has with Danny Huston who’s playing writer Whitfield Cook, who wrote Strangers on a Train for Hitchcock, than she does with Hitch himself. That’s certainly by design for this film’s purpose, but as I said above, it doesn’t exactly seem right.
For me, the real surprises in the cast are Scarlett Johansson and Jessica Biel. Johansson’s Janet Leigh is spot-on perfect and she catches your attention every time she’s on screen. I’ve not exactly been the biggest fan of Jessica Biel in the past, tending to think that she’s been more miscast in parts that I’ve seen her in, but here, she’s quite the revelation in her portrayal of Vera Miles and as far as I’m concerned she holds her own with Johansson and just demands your attention when she’s on screen.
Even with my problems with the film, I still thought it was pretty entertaining and certainly well worth seeing. Hopkins and Mirren do good work, though it’s somewhat stunted by the TV movie aspects of the portrayal of their relationship. Hitchcock is at it’s best though when it’s dealing with the actual making of Psycho itself, and within that, you’ll see some very cool moments highlighted by stellar performances from Scarlett Johnasson and Jessica Biel. If you are a fan of film history and more a fan of Hitchcock (my own personal favorite movie of all time is Hitchcock’s Vertigo), then this is certainly worth viewing, though you may want to just wait until it hits cable or streaming rather than run right out to theatres to see it.
Picks:
Jeff
Lena
Also opening in wide release this weekend, Playing for Keeps.
Back Seat Art House picks:
The standings for Back Seat Art House (after 7 weeks), the total average opening weekend dollars per theater:
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Congrats to Tony for his high score of 23!
Thanks to Tony, Art and Tad for their voice mails.
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#1 The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 from Summit Entertainment held at #1 with a gross of $17.4 million (-60.1%) in 4,008 theaters (-62). Total gross to date is $254.6 million. Budget was $120 million.
#2 Skyfall from Sony/Columbia held at #2 with a gross of $16.6 million (-53.4%) in 3,463 theaters (-63). Total gross to date is $245.6 million. Budget was $200 million.
#3 Rise of the Guardians from Paramount rose from #4 to #3 with a gross of $13.39 million (-43.7%) in 3,672 theaters (+19). Total gross to date is $48.8 million. Budget was $145 million.
#4 Lincoln from Buena Vista fell from #3 to #4 with a gross of $13.38 million (-47.9%) in 2,018 theaters. Total gross to date is $83.6 million. Budget was $65 million.
#5 Life of Pi from 20th Century Fox held at #5 with a gross of $12.1 million (-45.9%) in 2,928 theaters (+1). Total gross to date is $48.5 million. Budget was $120 million.
#6 Wreck-It Ralph from Buena Vista held at #6 with a gross of $6.9 million (-58.1%) in 3,087 theaters (-172). Total gross to date is $158.2 million. Budget was $165 million.
#7 Killing Them Softly from Weinstein Company opened at #7 with a gross of $6.8 million in 2,424 theaters. Budget was $15 million.
#8 Red Dawn (2012) from FilmDistrict fell from #7 to #8 with a gross of $6.5 million (-54.5%) in 2,781 theaters (+57). Total gross to date is $31.3 million. Budget was $65 million.
#9 Flight from Paramount fell from #8 to #9 with a gross of $4.5 million (-47%) in 2,603 theaters (-35). Total gross to date is $81.5 million. Budget was $31 million.
#10 The Collection from LD Entertainment opened at #10 with a gross of $3.1 million in 1,403 theaters. Budget was unknown.
#11 Silver Linings Playbook from Weinstein Company fell from #9 to #11 with a gross of $3.09 million (-29.5%) in 371 theaters (+4). Total gross to date is $10.7 million. Budget was $21 million.
#12 Anna Karenina from Focus Features held at #12 with a gross of $2.2 million (+150.5%) in 384 theaters (+318). Total gross to date is $4.1 million. Budget was unknown.
The combined gross of the top 12 movies this weekend was $106.1 million.
Sources:
Box Office Mojo
**We’re close to choosing the next six books for Back Seat Book Club and we need your recommendations! Leave a comment here, leave us a voice mail or leave a comment on our Goodreads group**
Author: Terry Pratchett
Publication date: 1996
Victor Gollancz
Plot Summary – ITS THE NIGHT BEFORE HOGSWATCH. AND IT’S TOO QUIET.
Where is the big jolly fat man? Why is Death creeping down chimneys and trying to say Ho Ho Ho? The darkest night of the year is getting a lot darker…Susan the gothic governess has got to sort it out by morning, otherwise there won’t be a morning. Ever again…
The 20th Discworld novel is a festive feast of darkness and Death (but with jolly robins and tinsel too).
As they say: You’d better watch out…
Quick thoughts:
Take the universe and grind it down to the finest powder and sieve it through the finest sieve and then show me one atom of justice, one molecule of mercy. and yet… and yet you act as if there is some ideal order in the world, as if there is some… some rightness in the universe by which it may be judged. – Hogfather
Your hosts for the episode:
this episode was recorded: 10/25/12
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Picks:
Jeff
Scott
Lena
Also in wide release this weekend, The Collection.
Back Seat Art House picks:
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Congrats for high scores of 23 go to:
Thanks to Art, Tad and Nick for the voice mail!
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