This photo, supplied by Warner Bros., shows Brandon
Routh in the title role of the new movie, Superman Returns. Louise Mingenbach,
costume designer for 'Superman Returns,' which opened in theaters Wednesday,
June 28, 2006, ,thinks Routh looks good in tights. 'A lot of effort went into
those tights.'(AP Photo/Warner Bros.Pictures, David James)
Superman may not be the world's greatest superhero at the box office, but the
Man of Steel still flies high. "Superman Returns" took in $52.15 million over
opening weekend, lifting its five-day total since its debut Wednesday to $84.2
million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
That puts the Warner Bros. film ahead of the premiere of last year's "Batman
Begins," another Warner superhero revival, which took in $48.7 million over its
opening weekend and $72.9 million in its first five days. But "Superman Returns"
finished far behind Sony's "Spider-Man 2," the record-holder for best five-day
openings, with $152.4 million over Fourth of July weekend in 2004.
The weekend's other new wide release, 20th Century Fox's "The Devil Wears
Prada," debuted far stronger than expected to come in second with $27 million.
Industry analysts had expected the movie, starring
Meryl Streep and Anne
Hathaway, to debut at less than $20 million.
The previous weekend's No. 1 movie, Sony's Adam Sandler comedy "Click," fell
to third place with $19.4 million, raising its 10-day total to $77.9 million.
Hollywood's overall revenues rose for the seventh straight weekend. The top
12 movies took in $140.1 million, up 5 percent from Fourth of July weekend last
year. If estimates hold, it would be the second-best Fourth of July weekend
ever, behind the $158.4 million haul in 2004, according to Paul Dergarabedian,
president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.
The first big-screen adventure for the Man of Steel in 19 years, "Superman
Returns" traces the comic-book hero's homecoming after a mysterious five-year
absence. Played by newcomer
Brandon Routh, Superman finds lady love Lois
Lane (Kate Bosworth) has a son and a new man in her life, while archenemy Lex
Luthor (Kevin Spacey) has hatched a plot to control the world.
Directed by Bryan Singer, who made the blockbusters "X-Men" and "X2: X-Men
United," "Superman Returns" earned favorable reviews. A Superman fan since
boyhood, Singer passed on doing a third "X-Men" to make "Superman Returns" after
Warner let him throw out previous Man of Steel scripts and start from scratch
with his own story.
"Bryan is just such a bright and creative individual. He had his own vision,
and he was right and did a great job," said Dan Fellman, Warner head of
distribution.
The movie should hit $110 million by Tuesday, Fellman said.
"Superman Returns" had big returns in 76 huge-screen IMAX theaters, most of
which ran the movie incorporating 3-D footage in many action sequences. About $5
million of the film's grosses came from IMAX theaters.
"The Devil Wears Prada," adapted from Lauren Weisberger's best-selling novel,
stars Hathaway as an aspiring journalist who reluctantly takes a job at a top
fashion magazine, where she works for a tyrannical editor (Streep).
The movie's audience was four-fifths women, who turned out in far bigger
numbers than 20th Century Fox had predicted.
"I don't know what to say. This is beyond my expectations," said Bruce
Snyder, the studio's head of distribution.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian
theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures through July 4
will be released Wednesday.
1. "Superman Returns," $52.15 million.
2. "The Devil Wears Prada," $27 million.
3. "Click," $19.4 million.
4. "Cars," $14 million.
5. "Nacho Libre," $6.2 million.
6. "The Lake House," $4.5 million.
7. "The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift," $4.4 million.
8. "Waist Deep," $3.3 million.
9. "The Break-Up," $2.8 million.
10. "The Da Vinci Code," $2.3 million.