Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

"Avatar" closing in on "Titanic" record

Updated: 2010-01-15 13:57
(Agencies)

LOS ANGELES - The four-day Martin Luther King Day weekend features a box office smackdown between "Avatar" and the tag-team pairing of two new pictures.

If James Cameron's behemoth manages to beat the newcomers, it would be the first to top the rankings for five consecutive weeks since "The Sixth Sense" in 1999.

It will also keep tongues wagging over its prospects for cruising past Cameron's "Titanic" in the history books.

But the competition appears potentially muscular: Warner Bros. sends out the Denzel Washington action movie "The Book of Eli," and Lionsgate launches the Jackie Chan comedy "The Spy Next Door," a more family-friendly action film.

Last weekend, "Avatar" shrugged off a trio of wide openers in posting the first four-peat performance since "The Dark Knight" in the summer of 2008.

Related readings:
 Lessons from Avatar for Chinese directors
 Avatar bonanza for animation firms
 Vatican says 'Avatar' is no masterpiece
 'Avatar' rules box office universe

Meanwhile, there's talk of Fox setting "Avatar" for DVD release in April. But don't expect an official decision until "Avatar" starts running out of theatrical steam, and nobody anticipates that happening anytime soon. In fact, industry observers now say it's not impossible for "Avatar" to beat the $1.84 billion worldwide total for Cameron's "Titanic."

Its North American tally through Wednesday stood at $446 million, behind only "Titanic" ($601 million), "The Dark Knight ($533 million) and "Star Wars" ($461 million).

The sci-fi epic could fall 25%-30% this session -- it slid 27% last weekend -- and still ring up about $36 million, and Monday grosses could take the haul past $40 million.

That likely would be enough to beat the newcomers. "Eli," skewing significantly male, could fetch $30 million-$40 million through Monday. It marks directing duo Allen and Albert Hughes' first theatrical feature since 2001's "From Hell."

Washington's movies usually open in the $20 million range, with the notable exception of 2007's "American Gangster," which kicked off with $43 million.

"Spy" looks likely to reach the high-teen millions through Monday. Directed by Brian Levant ("Are We There Yet?"), the film co-stars George Lopez and Billy Ray Cyrus, both good draws for family moviegoers. Chan was last on screen with 2008's "The Forbidden KIngdom," alongside Jet Li. The superstar pairing opened to $21 million.

Elsewhere, Peter Jackson's "The Lovely Bones" opens nationally after a month of limited engagements. The supernatural crime saga should play decently with young women.

8.03K
 
 
...
...