Sunday, October 30, 2011

Puss In Boots Tops Box Office

First Published: October 30, 2011 2:02 PM EDT Credit: Getty Images Caption Salma Hayek and Antonio Banderas arrive at the premiere of Dreamworks Animations Puss In Boots at the Regency Westwood Theatre on October 23, 2011 in Westwood, California.LOS ANGELES, Calif. -- The Shrek spinoff Puss in Boots landed on all fours, opening with an estimated $34 million to lead the box office. The DreamWorks 3-D animated film, distributed by Paramount Pictures, proved the popular character voiced by Antonio Banderas was a big enough draw outside the Shrek franchise. The PG-rated Puss in Boots scored with family audiences on the weekend before Halloween, and also drew a large Hispanic crowd, which made up 35 percent of its audience. Though the box office for the top 12 movies was up 7.8 percent from the corresponding weekend last year, it was still affected by both the unseasonable winter storm on the East Coast and the appeal of the Game 7 broadcast of baseballs World Series on Friday night. DreamWorks estimated the storm took off several million from Puss in Boots. The new release on the weekend from 20th Century Fox, the Justin Timberlake sci-fi thriller In Time, was down as much as20 percent Saturday in markets like NY and Philadelphia. But the largest estimated opening didnt happen in North America. The Adventures of Tintin, which is being distributed overseas by Sony Pictures and Paramount Pictures, opened in 19 international markets and hauled in $55.8 million. The performance-capture 3-D animated film, directed by Steven Spielberg and adapted from the beloved Belgian comic series, was especially popular in France, where its $21.5 million was the largest opening for a non-sequel Hollywood film. The film opens in the U.S. on Dec. 21. Were still waiting for the holiday season to kick in in earnest as we get into November, said Paul Dergarabedian, box-office analyst for Hollywood.com. The holiday season is going to be very strong at the box office. Paramount also claimed the weekends second top performing movie with the low-budget horror film Paranormal Activity 3. That film took in $18.5 million in its second week of release, bringing its cumulative total to $81.3 million. Paramounts Footloose was the fourth film on the weekend, adding $5.4 million for a three-week total of $38.4 million. In Time opened with $12 million domestically but took in more ($14.5 million) overseas. The biggest disappointment was The Rum Diary, the Hunter S. Thompson adaption starring Johnny Depp. It opened weakly, earning just $5 million, a low figure for a film headlined by Depp and which cost an estimated $50 million to make. But the solid opening for Puss in Boots was much needed for DreamWorks. The company said Tuesday its net income fell by half in the third quarter as its early summer release, Kung Fu Panda 2, did not haul in as much at the box office as last years Shrek Forever After. Reviews and audience reaction have been positive for Puss in Boots. Its release date was moved up a week to essentially give the film more time to run in theaters before other large fall movies are released. It added $17 million internationally, with most of that coming from Russia. We always looked at this as a two-weekend release strategy, so we think weve got a good start on that plan, said Anne Globe, head of worldwide marketing and consumer products at DreamWorks. Being the number one movie and the likely Halloween weekend record-breaker, were well-positioned to go into week two as well as play through the holidays. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday. 1. Puss in Boots, $34 million. ($17 million international.) 2. Paranormal Activity 3, $18.5 million. ($17 million international.) 3. In Time, $12 million. ($14.5 million international.) 4. Footloose, $5.4 million. ($1.4 million international.) 5. The Rum Diary, $5 million. 6. Real Steel, $4.7 million. 7. The Three Musketeers, $3.5 million. 8. The Ides of March, $2.7 million. 9. Moneyball, $2.4 million. 10. Courageous, $1.8 million. Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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