Denzel Washington and director Spike Lee scored the best opening of their careers on Sunday, as the heist thriller "Inside Man" grabbed the No. 1 spot at the weekend box office in North America with estimated ticket sales of $29 million.
An undated publicity photograph shows actors Jodie Foster and Denzel Washington in a scene from their new film 'Inside Man'. 'Inside Man' takes place during a hostage situation in which a tough cop matches wits with a clever bank robber who sets to pull the the perfect heist. (Universal Pictures/Handout/Reuters) |
Washington's previous best bow was the kidnap thriller "Man on Fire," which opened with $22.8 million in April 2004. Lee's best was the comedy concert "The Original Kings of Comedy," with $11 million in August 2000.
"Inside Man," which cost about $45 million to make, revolves around a cat-and-mouse game between a bank robber (Owen) and a New York cop (Washington). Foster plays an intermediary with her own agenda.
Universal said exit polling indicated that 68 percent of the audience was aged 30 and older, and that male viewers comprised 54 percent. Three-quarters of respondents said Washington was their main reason for going. Universal Pictures is a unit of General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal Inc.
GAME ON FOR 'STAY ALIVE'
Last weekend's champ, the futuristic terrorist drama "V for Vendetta," slipped to No. 2 with $12.3 million for the Friday-to-Sunday period, taking its 10-day haul to $46.2 million. The film, starring Hugo Weaving and Natalie Portman, has earned about $17.7 million from 24 markets. It was released by Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Bros. Pictures.
The box office boasted two other new entries. Walt Disney Co.'s video game thriller "Stay Alive," which surpassed expectations by opening at No. 3 with $11.2 million; and Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.'s comedy "Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector," which opened at No. 7 with a modest $7.1 million.
"Stay Alive" revolves around a group of youngsters who discover that players who lose the titular video game die mysteriously. Three-quarters of the audience was aged 25 and under, said Disney, which had been hoping for an opening in the $7 million to $10 million range. "Stay Alive" marks the first release under Disney's resurrected Hollywood Pictures label, which will focus on genre films.
"Larry the Cable Guy," starring the popular blue-collar stand-up comic, played mostly to male viewers over 21, Lions Gate said. The studio had hoped for an opening in the $7 million to $9 million range.
Rounding out the top five, Paramount Pictures' hit romantic comedy "Failure to Launch" fell two to No. 4 with $10.8 million, followed by Walt Disney Pictures' comedy remake "The Shaggy Dog" with $9.1 million, also down two places. Their respective totals stand at $63.9 million and $47.9 million, both after three weeks. Paramount is a unit of Viacom Inc.