A show attendee walks past a poster of Sony
Pictures' movie 'Silent Hill' during the opening day of ShoWest at Paris
hotel-casino in Las Vegas in this Monday, March 13, 2006, file photo. 'Silent
Hill' debuted with $20.2 million in its opening weekend, according to studio
estimates Sunday, April 23, 2006. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
LOS ANGELES - A real scary movie bumped off the spoof variety at the box
office. Sony's fright flick "Silent Hill," set in an eerie ghost town, debuted
with $20.2 million.
It took
over the top spot from the Weinstein Co. comedy "Scary Movie 4," which slipped
to No. 2 with $17 million in its second weekend, according to studio estimates
Sunday.
The White House assassination tale "The Sentinel," a 20th Century Fox
thriller starring Michael Douglas, Kiefer Sutherland and Eva Longoria, opened in
third place with $14.65 million.
The weekend's other new major debut, Universal's George W. Bush-"American
Idol" parody "American Dreamz" featuring Dennis Quaid and Hugh Grant, debuted a
weak No. 8 with $3.7 million.
After two weekends in limited release, Jennifer Aniston's comic drama
"Friends With Money" expanded nationwide and came in at No. 10 with $3.55
million. Aniston plays a down-on-her-luck housecleaner with three well-to-do
pals ( Frances McDormand, Catherine Keener and Joan Cusack).
Lifted by box-office leaders that included 20th Century Fox's animated hit
"Ice Age: The Meltdown" at No. 4 with $12.8 million, Hollywood revenues rose for
the fifth-straight weekend.
The top-12 movies took in $100.4 million, up 22 percent from the same weekend
last year, when "The Interpreter" debuted at No. 1 with $22.8 million.
After a prolonged dry spell in 2005, when movie attendance fell 8 percent,
Hollywood is on solid footing this year heading into a potentially big summer. A
surge over the past month has attendance running 4 percent ahead of last year's,
said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.
"This is exactly where the industry wants to be as we approach the biggest
moviegoing season of the year," Dergarabedian said. "It's night and day from
where we were last year."
The industry has a stronger early-summer lineup this time compared to last
year, when Hollywood got off to a slow start with "Kingdom of Heaven," "Kicking
and Screaming" and "Monster-in-Law."
Coming over the first three weekends this May are Tom Cruise's "Mission:
Impossible III," Tom Hanks and Ron Howard's "The Da Vinci Code," the animated
comedy "Over the Hedge" and "Poseidon," a remake of "The Poseidon Adventure."
"Not only has the box office continued to be up, and up significantly the
last several weeks, but we're headed into what looks to be a terrific May," said
Rory Bruer, head of distribution at Sony, which is releasing "The Da Vinci
Code."
Sony scored its fourth No. 1 opening of the year with "Silent Hill," starring
Radha Mitchell as a mom hunting for her ailing daughter in a mysterious town.
Along with "Silent Hill," two of Sony's other top debuts were horror movies that
were not shown to critics beforehand, part of a growing trend where studios skip
critic screenings when they expect bad reviews.
Two-thirds of the audience for "Silent Hill" was under 25, an age group less
likely to pay attention to reviews, and the horror genre tends to pull in fans
over opening weekend no matter what the critics say.