SUNDAY 8 AM, 4TH UPDATE: Jetlagged from traveling but home at last. Let’s start with the domestic bad news because that’s what Hollywood craves. New Line’s The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (3,160 theaters) is a complete disaster despite no fresh comedy at the multiplex since Identity Thief opened five weeks ago. This is Warner Bros’ 5th straight box office dud,
continuing what has been an abysmal beginning of the year. Despite Warner Bros’ Best Picture Oscar win for Ben Affleck’s Argo, the studio’s woes began with Gangster Squad in January and continued with Bullet To The Head and Beautiful Creatures through February, and festered with the $200 million flop Jack The Giant Slayer on March 1st. Now the studio is counting on May to deliver big grosses again with The Great Gatsby, The Hangover Part III, and the much anticipated Man Of Steel. Any hope for an upside because of the casting of Steve Carell and Jim Carrey (who’s in the Witness Protection Program in the trailers)
is gone even with a modest $32M production budget. Those stars should have delivered at least a $20M if not $30M opening. Instead their pic only maxed $10.3M for its first weekend after grossing only $3.7M Friday and $4.1M Saturday. And, remember, that includes 1,800 Thursday late shows, too. Even worse, pic scored a ‘C+’ CinemaScore which will hurt word of mouth along with a dismal 25% positive reviews from top critics on Rotten Tomatoes. What’s interesting to me is how many famous names are on the movie. Carell and Steve Buscemi play a washed-up Las Vegas magician duo, with Carrey in a small but flashy role as a rival street performer. It also starred Olivia Wilde, Alan Arkin and James Gandolfini. It was directed by veteran TV helmer Don Scardino while Tyler Mitchell is credited with the story, Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley credited with rewrites, and no less than Jason Reitman credited with the polish. There’s a long list of credited producers, including Chris Bender and JC Spink of the management firm Benderspink, and Carell’s banner Carousel Productions which he runs with Vance DeGeneres who is Ellen’s older brother. Burt Wonderstone was picked to open the SXSW film festival even though anyone could see that this movie was going nowhere. Everyone I talked to thought it would be weak from the get-go because magic just doesn’t sell at the box office. The marketing campaign fell on Carell’s shoulders with Carrey just a hired hand and not plugging the pic.
Burt was beaten badly by Sony/TriStar’s new Troika/WWE Studios pickup starring Halle Berry, The Call (2,507 theaters). It shocked Hollywood for 2nd place and earned a ‘B+’ Cinema with $6.2M for
Friday box office and $6.8M Saturday for a $17.1M first weekend. Even though the low-budget kidnap thriller is playing in 653 fewer locations. “Huge credit to Halle and all her hard work,” a Sony exec gushes. Grosses are coming in higher than expected by Sony which acquired U.S., Canada and a few other territories like South Africa and Scandinavia. The film was produced for mere mid-teens. That said, its plot was a lot like 2004′s Cellular starring Kim Basinger and Chris Evans only with the roles reversed. This time, kidnap victim Abigail Breslin is young and Veteran 911 operator Berry is tracking her down. Naturally Sony’s media campaign targeted females as well as the African American audience. TV ads ran on crime/thriller shows but also The Bachelor and Army Wives while Berry pulled out all the talk show stops. The campaign began early with a teaser trailer on Yahoo in January. There also was an online game called ‘You Make the Call’ which put users in the 911 operator’s chair. Brad Anderson (The Machinist) directed the screenplay written by Richard D’Ovidio.
And #1 in the marketplace and still great news for Disney is its $218M holdover Oz The Great And Powerful. This
juggernaut at the box office had a strong midweek performance now that about 18% of kids are out of school for spring break. And there’s still little else in the way of family fare in the marketplace at this time. Now expect a 10-day domestic total of around $145M with $11.4M Friday and $18.2M Saturday for $42.2M for this second weekend – down only -46.6%. This Wizard Of Oz prequel crossed the $100M domestic mark in only 6 days and North American cume now stands at $145M. “We benefited by the fact that that we were the first big event film which had the halo effect of people talking about it over the weekend and wanting to go see it if they didn’t have the chance,” a Disney exec analyzes. Oz crossed $100M international on Friday with 80% of the marketplace open and big countries like France & China left to go. Currently in release in 55 territories representing about 85% of all foreign, overseas gross is $136.8M and worldwide cume is $281.8M and counting. I’m told international drop off is about -43% with a slightly larger expected drop in Russia (-68%). (If you take Russia out, the drop was only 35%.) Pic was still #1 in UK, Australia, Brazil, Italy, Germany, and Spain.
This weekend’s total moviegoing is in the neighborhood of $103M – about even wth last year’s. Here’s the Top Ten based on weekend estimates:
1. Oz The Great and Powerful (Disney) Week 2 [Runs 3,912] PG
Friday $11.4M, Saturday $18.2M, Weekend $42.2M (-46.6%), Cume $145.0M
2. The Call (Troika/TriStar/Sony) NEW [Runs 2,507] R
Friday $6.2M, Saturday $6.8M, Weekend $17.1M
3. The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (Warner Bros) NEW [Runs 3,160] PG13
Friday $3.7M, Saturday $4.1M, Weekend $10.3M
4. Jack The Giant Slayer (Warner Bros) Week 3 [Runs 3,357] PG13
Friday $1.7M, Saturday $2.8M, Weekend $6.3M, Cume $54.0M
5. Identity Thief (Universal) Week 6 [Runs 2,842] R
Friday $1.4M, Saturday $2.0M, Weekend $4.5M, Cume $123.70M
6. Snitch (Summit/Lionsgate) Week 4 [Runs 2,353] PG13
Friday $1.0K, Saturday $1.5M, Weekend $3.6M, Cume $37.3M
7. 21 And Over (Relativity) Week 3 [Runs 2,424] R
Friday $950K, Saturday $1.0M, Weekend $2.6M, Cume $21.9M
8. Silver Linings Playbook (Weinstein) Week 18 [Runs 1,602] R
Friday $745K, Saturday $1.1M, Weekend $2.5M, Cume $124.5M
9. Safe Haven (Relativity) Week 5 [Runs 2,206] PG13
Friday $840K, Saturday $1.0M, Weekend $2.4M, Cume $66.9M
10. Escape From Planet Earth (Weinstein) Week 5 [Runs 2,211] PG
Friday $619K, Saturday $962K, Weekend $2.2M, Cume $52.0M
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I saw Burt Wonderstone today. Empty matinee. My main problem with it was Steve Carell. And I love Steve Carell. But this was clearly written for Will Ferrell, and the entire movie it was like Carell was trying his hardest to do a Will Ferrell impression. It was kind of odd actually. I thought Jim Carrey was funny in the movie. And there were laughs. But Carell was delivering lines that Ferrell would’ve killed. Maybe he passed on the project. Not necessarily the best project for Carell. Or maybe he just tried too hard to be Ferrell.
Studio messed it up. It was supposed to be more “Will Ferrell” like in general.
I don’t think Will Ferrell would have helped this project hit big.
Will Ferrell sucks, and Steve Carell is well on his way to sucking. They should both retire now and save us all a lot of crap in the future.
I saw The Call yesterday & it made for a pretty decent thriller. It did get stupid in the end but it was overall a fun roller coaster ride. I don’t feel the buzz either for Burt Wonderstone & even less inclined to go now. I think I’ll check out Stoker instead.
Finally! It should be the last nail to the coffin of Steve Carrell’s career as leading man. People just don’t want to see him in movies. They don’t care for him. He’s seriously overpaid and should go back to TV while he’s still wanted there. No movie stardom for him.
Disagree. People still like Carell, but not his film choices.
Orly? So pay him 3-5 million per movie not 8-10 million. He doesn’t deserve this kind of money.
Crazy, Stupid, Love made $84 million domestic.
It needed to make well over $84 million just to break even so not sure what your point is?
It’s the incredibly stupid title “Incredible Burt Wonderstone” that caused the box office bombing.
A shocking box office success for WWE films!
Halle Barry may have saved their entire film division.
Which means more wrestlers on film next year.
“Which means more wrestlers on film next year.”
Can’t Wait!
@ MrJeff2000. Stop your exaggeration. The Call will not be a blockbuster success. It will only earn a decent profit-that is it. And, it will not do wonders for WWE films. You are acting like this is TDKR box office and The Avengers numbers. Give me a break.
There are some pretty interesting guys who wrestle, and nowhere else are you going to find men that huge who are used to working a mic in front of 20,000, occasionally up to 80,000 people plus a TV audience.
There’s the Rock, obviously. But Steve Austin’s working steady, Dave Bautista just landed Guardians of the Galaxy, Kevin Nash was in Magic Mike, and I’m sure there are others. I can’t stand wrestling, but some of these guys bring a lot to the table.
That said, I don’t think I’ve ever enjoyed a wrestler in a film produced by the WWE.
I’ve seen a couple of Steve’s movies and I think he’s pretty horrible. The dude needs a live audience to feed off of.
If you mean Steve Austin, he sucks as the hero, but as a bad guy he’s alright. A hero has to be outmatched to be relatable, and fighting a monster like him, anyone would be.
Oz was never likely to perform to the level that Alice did (especially since Alice road the coat-tails of Avatar’s success with 3D the preceding winter) but while it won’t do a Billion it will probably not be a total bust.
It’s on track to probably come in around half a Billion in box office at minimum. By the time Disney monetizes the rest out of the film then it’s no John Carter style fiasco. But comps to Alice that ignore the Avatar benefit it enjoyed are just skewing things.
Carell and Carey are has been, Olivia Wilde is a never been and the movie looked horrible.
I’m happy for Berry, she is unfairly maligned.
If Will Farrel was playing the Jim Carrey character, Wonderstone would have been a huge hit.
Disney is as interested in Oz extensions (rides, characters) as in making money with this film. It’s the first step in building out the franchise.
I liked the idea of bert wonderstone, but that trailer killed my interest in seeing the film. Theres, not one second in the trailer that’s funny. It was like they forgot the movie is a comedy and they randomly put in clips from the film. It has to be better then that trailer…
I loved Burt wonderstone…. Carrel was awkward but funny and Jim carrey steals every scene in a pretty small co-starring role… I get the comedy was kind of uneven, but the only weakness I saw was the way Warner’s sold the film… Terrible trailers and ads. Btw, the theatre was laughing last night!
Actually, if they had just done a movie based on the Jim Carrey magician character, they would have had a winner… I could watch someone mock Cris Angel for hours.
How is Halle Berry’s movie with 16 millions is beyound me. It looks so cheap and stupid. Like some regular episode of Criminal Minds or Following. I thought it will have some 7 million on week end.
I wonder if they lied a little and final number will be like 14 millions.
The Call reminds me of a movie I saw on tv recently called Cellular starring Kim Basinger. Ten years from now same type of movie with another fading star will do moderately well.
Steve Carrell should have done the finale of The Office.
Do audiences want to see magic on the screen? What does this mean for “Now You See Me” being released in May?
“Now You See Me” actually looks interesting and has a well cut trailer. It doesn’t look like a hammy comedy from the late 90′s like “Burt Wonderstone”.
Steve Carell is like the ironic Don Knotts of the 21st century. He’s very good in ensembles, but can’t carry a lead.
BITE YOUR TONGUE
Don Knotts was a freaking ICON. I don’t care if he carried a film or not. Steve is not Don Knotts. And I will say this in all confidence. 30 years from now you won’t be saying his name in the same way.
NOW never ever knock Don Knotts again. YOU will be punished if you do.
Buddy, I’m with you. The Ghost and Mister Chicken is a true classic if ever there was one!
Don’t forget “The Incredible Mr. Limpert”!
What do you mean, this was going to be a bomb because “magic doesn’t sell at the box office?” Statements like that don’t make any sense at all. Perhaps films about magic have failed at the box office in the past because they weren’t particularly good movies. I can see huge potential for a movie about magic if it has a great script! Isn’t that what it’s all about in the end: a great script?
All hail the wonderful wizard of Oz!!!!!
Good for Halle. She hasn’t had a hit in awhile. Perhaps now she can get herself some good movies and the power-people won’t think she’s box office poison anymore.
Halle Berry was never box-office poison, she just had a few lousy projects. That could happen to anyone!
Lol “magic doesn’t sell at the box office. ”
Harry potter agrees.
You’re a bit of an idiot, aren’t you.
Vegas magicians =/= Fantasy witches
To be honest, I’m glad Wonderstone bombed. Maybe it will humble Carell a bit. (Yes, I’m an Office fan who’s p’ed off that he turned down the series finale.)
How awful is it to take a project to New Line…the execs there are dicks and act like they are big shots making good movies and it just makes me sad.
New Line used to be a special place and then Emmerich and Brener turned it into the worst place ever.
Has such a smug stuck up vibe there. You guys made Willard though its not ok.
If Time Warner cant manage their company why purchase their stock?
This is who to be blamed for Burt – a horrible relatively close to unreadable script that a studio again went for lowest common denominator. Worked with the awful Identity Thief – but not this.
Wow New Line is really churning out the crap. Finally someone made a sequel to Blades Of Glory.
Whats next Ed Hardy Shirts the movie?
Starring really bad executives, as they fight to see who can kiss Toby or Rich Boners ass more to become America’s biggest douche.
How great would it be if cool and or smart executives worked there?