SUNDAY AM: North American numbers are fulfilling what promises to be one of the most interesting box office weekends of the summer movie season. That’s because the two films opening — a comic book reboot, and an M Night Shyamalan horror thriller — have received really bad buzz for months ahead of time because of their troubled pedigrees. While No. 1 The Incredible Hulk and No. 3 The Happening had better-than-expected debuts overall, they experienced fall-offs from Friday to Saturday (-15% and -21% respectively).
Let’s face it, most film analysts thought Marvel and Universal were nuts to go back to the drawing board for Friday’s No. 1 The Incredible Hulk after the 2003 Ang Lee/Eric Bana version was beaten up so badly both by critics and the box office. “When Marvel and Universal announced they were making a Hulk film again, there were big whoops this would be the first flop of the summer,” a studio insider recalled to me. ”But now something good is going to happen.” But this was another huge risk for Marvel Studios which self-financed its PG-13 comic book caper for around $160 million.
Then the studio manhandled both director Louis Leterrier and star Edward Norton, who rewrote the script, then fought Marvel’s deep cuts to the final pic which nevertheless was well reviewed (67% positive). So it’s miraculous that The Incredible Hulk, which opened in 3,505 theaters, made $21.7 million Friday and $18.4M Saturday to score a $54.5 million weekend. Because of the bad buzz, its two studios were only expecting a $45M FSS. But that’s still significantly less than the $62.1M debut of the first Hulk which was considered a disappointing film because it experienced a huge drop-off. But the new The Incredible Hulk benefitted from slicker marketing and plotting as well as a lot of goodwill from Marvel’s blockbuster Iron Man. Not to mention that Robert Downey Jr cameo.
Even though The Incredible Hulk is Marvel’s 2nd best-known character (with Spider-Man No. 1), the reboot is only the 5th biggest pic for a top Marvel character in a non-sequel opening. (To recap: Spider-Man broke the bank with $115M and so did Iron Man with $98.6M. Hulk opened to $62M. Fantastic Four to $56M. X-Men to $54.4M, GhostRider to $52M (4-day wkd) and Daredevil to $45M (4-day wkd).) In this desperate-for-another-franchise business, that’s probably good enough for Marvel Studios to try to make a sequel. But with Norton? Well, this was his highest opening ever (2nd to Red Dragon‘s $36.6 million). Exit polling gave The Incredible Hulk a Cinemascore of A- with males making up 60% of the audiences and females 40%; 48% under age 25%; 25 yrs and older 52%; an ethnically diverse audience of slightly less than half Caucasian (46%), followed by Hispanic (28%), African American (13%), Asian (7%), and other(6%). But most interesting of all was that the vast majority of the audience (82%) had seen the 2003 movie.
Also beaten up badly has been the other newcomer this weekend, M. Night Shyamalan’s first R-rated horror thriller The Happening from 20th Century Fox. The Mark Wahlberg starrer started out No. 2 Friday even after film critics and writers alike seemed intent on reviewing the writer-director-producer instead of the movie. (Only 11% positive on Rotten Tomatoes.) With a nasty tell-all book and several film flops behind him, Shyamalan no longer is the popular suspense moviemaker celebrated for his early hits like The Sixth Sense and Signs. Instead, he’s been branded as the hopelessly arrogant has-been, with media outlets appearing to root for the failure of his latest pic (and some newspapers like USA Today even published spoilers).
In an attempt to mitigate the collateral damage from Shyamalan’s unpopularity, Fox laid off much of the cost of The Happening on Indian-based UTV and to a lesser extent Spyglass, while also limited Shyamalan’s exposure to the media. (I’m told the studio was reluctant to let M. Night insert one of his Hitchcock-style cameo appearances into the new pic.) But the always aggressive Fox marketing gave the film an intriguing ad campaign with great visuals (all those bodies seemingly falling from the sky). So what a huge relief for everyone concerned that The Happening managed a $30.5M weekend when the studio was expecting only high teens or low 20s. It exceeded all expectations from 2,986 venues on Friday with $13M. “Obviously, by the strong showing friday, he still has a big fan base,” a Fox source said about Shyamalan. But then the pic dropped off 23% Saturday with $10.2M and fell to #3. Although there’s often a fall-off for horror pics from Date Night, especially if it’s Friday The 13th, the movie was badly received in exit polling. It earned only a Cinemascore of D.
The rest of the Top 10 movies this weekend were holdovers. Moving up a notch to No. 2 was the DreamWorks Animation / Paramount top film from last week Kung Fu Panda which has been playing more like a four-quadrant tentpole than a kiddie toon. It fell only 43% to make $34.3M for the weekend from an expanded theater count of 4,136 for a big new cume of $117.9M weekend. Sony’s original comedy You Don’t Mess With The Zohan starring Adam Sandler under Judd Apatow’s banner, fell two notches to finish No. 4 Friday with $16.4M from 3,466 runs, or -57%, with a new cume of $68.7M. No 5 was Paramount’s Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull with $13.5M from 3,805 theaters and a new cume of $275.3M. And then there’s another surprise — the staying power of HBO Films / New Line / Warner Bros’ ultimate chick flick Sex And The City which came in No. 6 with $10.1M from 3,155 plays for a new cume of $119.9M.
At No. 7, Marvel / Paramount’s Iron Man finished the weekend with $5.1M in 2,403 venues and a new cume of $297.4M. weekend. Rogue Pictures / Universal’s The Strangers came in No. 8 with $4M from 2,410 theaters and a new cume of $45.3M. Still making money at No. 9 is Walden Media/Disney’s The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian with $3M from 2,308 runs and a new cume of $131.7M. Finally, in No. 10, Fox’s What Happens In Vegas made $1.7M from 1,422 plays for a new cume of $75.7M.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.









i think the second hulk will be as bad as the first. No matter how many cameos are done (I admit i have not seen it so i talk from my back side) and i did go see the Happening and it SUCKED. Shyamalan has good stories but dosnt bring the story to a close you are always left w/ a thats it feeling the only movies he did do a good job on were signs and 6th sense
I enjoyed The Happening. Very much an extended “Twighlight Zone” episode type of movie. I have enjoyed all M. Night’s films, especially the ridiculously under appreciated Unbreakable, a masterpiece. Signs, The Village, even Lady, quite enjoyable. In retrospect, Hitchcock left a great body of work, with many average movies in the mix. M. Night might not rise to the level of Alfred, but I anticipate all of his projects.
I enjoyed The Happening because I never know what to expect from Shyamalan. He never fails to get me thinking about all the layers of his films. It was a big departure from his usual style, and had some great humor.
Shyamalan doesn’t preach or explain, he just lays it out and allows the viewer to come to his own conclusions.
I can’t wait for his next one!
I don’t know how or why it has become chic to put down Ang Lee’s “The Hulk.” It was a good solid effort that sought to bring some maturity to an otherwise juvenile genre. And it succeeded!
And a point of clarification (since rottentomatoes.com was cited):
Louis Leterrier’s “The Incredible Hulk” currently has a positive rating of 64% out of 141 reviews listed (dropping 3% since Ms. Finke posted her article).
Ang Lee’s “The Hulk” has a 61% positive rating out of 219 reviews. That is not a critical flop nor is it significantly worse than the new movie.
The superhero genre needs to embrace what Mr. Lee brought to the party in order to elevate it. It must grow and become more than what it currently is (which is cookie-cutter and stagnant).
I’m sorry, but The Happening was just plain awful. It’s the summer’s second example of ‘Lucas Syndrome’, where a filmmaker who’s done a few good pictures is given free rein and final cut, with no one to rewrite them.
M. Night is incredibly talented, but has absolutely lost perspective in his writing. Happening is a god-awful script, and technically horrendous. Someone should have told him that before they dropped $60 million on it.
Not to mention casting – Marky Mark and Zooey Deschanel? REALLY? Whose idea was that? Probably the worst on-screen couple since Kutcher and Brittany Murphy in Just Married. Awful, awful, awful.
I liked The Happening. I think what has Hollywood so pissed is that it isn’t a cartoon, a remake,or a remake based on a cartoon, or something with the John Belusi of the big screen, Will Farrel.
Since when are studios in the business of doing a remake that makes LESS than the original? Huh? That’s a great opening (and nobody’s factoring in inflation, to boot). The fact that the studio low-balled expectations means little (they almost always low ball).
THE HAPPENING wouldn’t be considered a great weekend if M.Night hadn’t flopped the last couple of times out (just think if these were the opening grosses following SIXTH SENSE).
Don’t fall for those lowered “expectations”!
Most film makers get better over time. M Night has been careening downward since Sixth Sense. I can’t believe people give him money to make these flops. He shouldn’t direct anything longer than a trailer. Maybe if he wasn’t so arrogant to think he has to write, direct, produce and star in his movies, he would do better. He can’t write dialogue that’s at all believable.
Hulk was a fun movie. The Happening looks horrible. The whole eco thing is just so cliched and heavy-handed by now. Painful. And Wahlberg is a horrible actor. He can protray arrogant cocky meatheads … and that’s about it. Although he couldn’t even pull that off in the Departed. He looks like he’s acting when he acts.
To the person complaining about the boom mic in Happening, it’s a projectionist problem at the theatre, not a fault of the direction.
But, I agree that the film was horrid. Though I didn’t even like Sixth Sense, I rush out and see every one of his movies with my friends opening weekend, find a good spot separated from people, and mock the entire production. I dont know if I’ve ever had a better time making fun of a movie than The Village. Priceless. Saw it at least twice. Lady In The Water was a letdown, but this was definitely a return to laughably bad form.
Also… the comment about every Hitchcock film not being as great as Rear Window or Psycho is priceless. Sure, he had some misfires. But those two CLASSICS aren’t even his best two films in my mind. And the guy made at least ten films that are virtually perfect. It’s horrific to even talk about M. Night in the same breath as Hitch.
these horror pictures like happening seem to open well and then fall of as usual. People are wanting to see something new and then they go and again nothing new just another totally depressing film (if you can call it that)/ in reality the happening is that the great majority of Americans are sick and tired of the depressed hollywood glop and they are sick and tired of mass killings or mass suicides or mass murderer it is sooooo overdone it is pathetic i mean really pathetic / it is pitiful // there is nothing new and they keep remaking old movies that had something in them besides these worn out themes because they can’t come up with anything new // once you have seen hacking blood and mass killings once just adding in some little quirk just does not make it new just the same ole same ole (glop) that nobody really wants to see // the vast majority are sick and tired of going to a movie to have a good time and comming out depressed // they are just sick and tired of it // i hear it all the time over and over again when the subject of movies comes up // they have just plain had it // and for good reason too
I just saw the Happening and I am very disappointed. This movie was complete crap. I should have gone to see the Hulk. The movie really did have a good plot. M-Night is make the movie The Avatar, dude…all I can say is DON’T SCREW THAT MOVIE UP or please just allow someone who can do a better job at the movie do it.
VERY DISAPPOINTED…
why does everyone keep saying “the happening is an original script/idea/movie”?? didn’t anybody see “the signal” about 4 months ago? they sure do look the same. m night lost me after “signs”, it was stupid, aliens with space travel need crop circles to navigate to a planet covered in water which can kill them. thats just stupid. so no more ticket money for him and now I wont even bother to netflix his crap, not worth the time.
THE HULK ROCKS
both movies were terrible.
acting in “the happening” was nothing short of a joke. shymalan’s worst.
hulk was nothing short of weak the whole time until the end when a certain someone walked in. I can see what they envisioned, but it never got there. They saw something brilliant in their minds, and out came poo.
the box office is getting surprises, but we aren’t. hopefully they’re using this money to make something good.
I hated Lee’s Hulk. Too ridiculous, too juvenile. I liked the new one, though.
I have given credit where Mr. Lee’s movie deserved it, but I also feel his version was very embryonic to the overall modern take on the Hulk mythos. It also showed an undeveloped understanding on what makes the character tick. More a false and unsure attempt, instead of the cognitive or intuitive understanding that typically precedes taking one’s training wheels off.
…the latest Marvel produced movie is the Hulk in all his mature and grown-up glory. nor longer gestating, learning to walk….or cutting oneself shaving. It is possible that Mr. Lee’s version was allowed to happen in order for this one to be better understood & enjoyed.
Thank you Mr. Leterrier and Mr. Norton for a fun time. Hopefully you can get some mileage out of your production before the summer is over….especially so that Marvel will want to do another one.
I just saw the incredible hulk and i sneaked into the happening…I loved both! Incredible hulk looks way more realistic this time (although still a lil fake). Norton and Tyler did a pretty good job. The villain also did a great job at making sense of the plot.
The happening was good. I dont know why everyone here is hating it. It was suspenseful; it had all the effects of what Night’s movies have been in the past. The acting for Marky Mark wasnt as great as I expected, but i liked the plot. Its true that at times the characters made stupid decisions, but dont all scary movies do that anyway?
Happening was a disaster.What a waste of time. I saw bunch of folks acting intrigued just for the heck of it. A big DUD. I want my money back, Mr syamalan.
wow. someone said edward norton was excellent in the illusionist. that is easily the most ridiculous statement pertaining to cinema i have heard in the past decade. good sir, please dont procreate and pollute the already tainted gene pool of motion pictue opinion. some people think all opinions are valid and debatable. i do not. i am always right.
ang lee’s hulk was fun and non-demanding. good. if you want to be blown away by a movie, rent magnolia. for gods sake, its a green monster. get over yourself.
mr m night shayma-wutever-the-fuck, get over yourself. sixth sense was good, but when did great and tricky endings become more important than a substantive and enthralling beginning and middle?
im bored of writing.
Wow! Arrogant? M.Night Shama-Lama-Ding-Dong is arrogant?! NOOOO, really? The self-proclaimed second coming of Hitchcock? Sixth Sense was quite good, but the guy’s still a legend in his own mind.
M. Night DID have a cameo: as Joey, the guy calling Zooey’s character.
I agree that Ang Lee’s “Hulk” was lame. Actually it was Ang Lee’s first attempt at the whole “gay” thing. If you watch closely you’ll see what I mean.
i hope against hope that THE HAPPENING was a self-parody on his previous films. taken in that vein, the movie was absolutely hilarious. otherwise, as a true horror/suspense film, it was a horribly frustrating film to sit through.
the hulk?? really?? the hulk?? are you people 12 years old?
crap movies like this are the reason other countries are blowing past us
My question is did people really hate Ang Lee’s Hulk as much as they say they do? I thought there was a lot more character and substance in Ang Lee’s version but of course also found a great performance and more action in the new version. Both were good.