Carrey's 'Yes Man' earns aye vote with $18M debut
LOS ANGELES Movie audiences greeted Jim Carrey and Will Smith with a lukewarm "yes' as snowstorms undermined weekend debuts from both stars.
Carrey's comedy "Yes Man" opened at No. 1 with $18.2 million in ticket sales, while Smith's drama "Seven Pounds" came in second with $16 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
Debuting at No. 3 with $10.5 million was Matthew Broderick's animated family flick "The Tale of Despereaux."
The new movies arrived in theaters Friday just as storms pounded the Northeast.
"Those markets back east just got hammered," said Chris Aronson, distribution executive for 20th Century Fox, whose sci-fi saga "The Day the Earth Stood Still" slipped from No. 1 to No. 4 with $10.2 million. The movie starring Keanu Reeves raised its 10-day total to $48.6 million.
"Yes Man," released by Warner Bros., stars Carrey as a loser who turns his life around by subscribing to a philosophy of saying "yes" to everything. Sony's "Seven Pounds" casts Smith as a mysterious IRS agent doing good deeds for strangers, and Universal's "Tale of Despereaux" features Broderick as the mouthpiece for a tiny mouse on a heroic mission.
In limited release, Mickey Rourke's acclaimed drama "The Wrestler" had a heavyweight debut, taking in $209,474 in just four theaters for a whopping average of $52,369.
By comparison, "Yes Man" played in 3,434 theaters and averaged $5,288 per theater, while "Seven Pounds" opened in 2,758 and averaged $5,801 per theater. The No. 3 film "The Tale of Despereaux" played in 3,104 theaters and grabbed $3,385 per venue.
The film released by Fox Searchlight stars Rourke as a former wrestling champion struggling for one last taste of past glory. The comeback theme of "The Wrestler" parallels Rourke's real life, with the actor in the running for an Academy Award nomination after his bad boy behavior virtually ruined his career in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
While winter came in with a bang, Hollywood's solid year was going out with a whimper. The overall box office plunged for the second straight weekend as this season's pre-holiday offerings continued to lag far behind the strong finish provided by such 2007 hits as Smith's "I Am Legend" and "Alvin and the Chipmunks."
- 1 Oil steady as U.S. crude stocks drop offsets fuel rise
- 2 Meryl Streeps daughter gets first Hollywood break
- 3 Asian stocks edge higher ahead of Fed decision
- 4 Views sought on multi-party litigation
- 5 Mainland wine export deal reached
- 6 Martin, Baldwin to "ratchet up the funny" at Oscars
- 7 Stocks extend gains following ISM
- 1 China to launch stock exchange for smaller companies
- 2 Obama bringing hefty agenda on European trip
- 3 GM sees bankruptcy risk
- 4 For Wall Street, March is best month since 2002
- 5 North Korea missile consistent with satellite: U.S.
- 6 HK, Shenzhen agree on innovation plan
- 7 $6.6b Gov't deficit recorded
- 1 Hasbro profit beats, sees lower cable deal costs
- 2 U.S. housing inventory data points to stabilization
- 3 Wall St extend gains after economic data
- 4 Halliburton profit drops 47 percent but tops forecasts
- 5 Magna, Sberbank submit changed Opel bid: source
- 6 Wall St opens higher after CIT deal
- 7 Hasbro profit beats, Discovery deal to hurt less
|
|



















YouTube Expands Mobile Video Service


