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'Narnia' Crushes 'The Tourist' In Weekend Box Office

DAVID GERMAIN   12/12/10 04:01 PM ET   AP

Angelina Jolie Tourist Box Office

LOS ANGELES — The latest chapter in "The Chronicles of Narnia" saga has sailed to the top of the weekend box office, though the franchise sank to a weak debut compared to the first two movies.

"The Voyage of the Dawn Treader," the third in the franchise based on C.S. Lewis' fantasy novels, took in $24.5 million domestically, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie's romantic thriller "The Tourist" opened in second-place with $17 million.

"Dawn Treader" revenues showed a huge drop from 2005's "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe," which took in $65.6 million over opening weekend, and 2008's "Prince Caspian," which did $55 million.

But with the movie topping $80 million in 85 countries overseas, for a worldwide total of $105.5 million, executives at distributor 20th Century Fox said they are making good headway toward recouping the movie's budget of just under $150 million.

"We had a huge task ahead of us to resurrect this franchise and get movie-goers back to that feeling of affection they had for the first movie. I think all the evidence says we've accomplished that," said Chris Aronson, head of distribution for Fox, which took over the "Narnia" series when Disney dropped it after the second movie finished at $141.6 million domestically, less than half the $291.7 million haul of the first. "I think they all had such a bad taste in their mouth from the last one. That's why we really had our work cut out for us."

"Dawn Treader" follows the adventures of some of the Pevensie siblings from the first two films as they take a magical sea voyage with their royal pal Caspian. Liam Neeson again provides the voice of talking lion Aslan.

Sony's "The Tourist" also had a quiet start. The film stars Jolie as an Englishwoman who picks up a mild-mannered American (Depp) on a train in Europe as a diversion while she's on the run from cops and gangsters.

"You have two of the biggest stars in the world, so expectations could be skewed a bit," said Rory Bruer, Sony's head of distribution. "But it certainly is a respectable opening."

The previous weekend's No. 1 movie, Disney's animated musical "Tangled," slipped to third-place with $14.6 million, raising its domestic total to $115.6 million.

Hollywood remains in a lull as it heads into the Christmas frenzy. Among the movies that will compete for holiday audiences are Jeff Bridges' sci-fi tale "Tron: Legacy," Robert De Niro and Ben Stiller's sequel "Little Fockers," Jack Black's comic adventure "Gulliver's Travel's" and Reese Witherspoon's romance "How Do You Know."

Overall revenues totaled $94 million, down 3 percent from the same weekend last year, when "The Princess and the Frog" was No. 1, according to box-office tracker Hollywood.com.

"The marketplace is pretty much in a malaise, unless you're a specialty or indie film playing in a limited number of theaters," said Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian. "Those are really the bright spots in an otherwise lackluster post-Thanksgiving period."

In limited release, Natalie Portman's ballet drama "Black Swan" expanded to more theaters and leaped into the top-10, coming in at No. 6 with $3.3 million in just 90 cinemas. That gave it a strong average of $37,024 a theater, compared to $6,892 in 3,555 cinemas for "Dawn Treader" and $6,168 in 2,756 locations for "The Tourist."

Distributor Fox Searchlight expands "Black Swan" into nationwide release Friday, three days after the Golden Globe nominations, where the film is considered a likely contender in acting and other categories. Portman, also a strong Academy Awards prospect, plays a ballerina coming unglued amid the stress of fending off a rival for the lead in "Swan Lake."

Mark Wahlberg and Christian Bale's boxing drama "The Fighter" was the latest awards contender to put up huge numbers in a limited-release opening. The Paramount film took in $320,000 in four theaters, averaging a whopping $80,000.

"The Fighter" stars Wahlberg as real-life boxer Micky Ward, who overcame harsh family conflicts to earn a title shot in his mid-30s with help from half-brother Dicky Eklund (Bale), an ex-fighter whose life unraveled amid crime and crack addiction. The film expands to wide release Friday.

Disney's Shakespeare adaptation "The Tempest," with Helen Mirren playing the traditionally male lead of the play, opened modestly with $45,000 in five theaters, for a $9,000 average.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. "The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader," $24.5 million.

2. "The Tourist," $17 million.

3. "Tangled," $14.6 million.

4. "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1," $8.5 million.

5. "Unstoppable," $3.8 million.

6. "Black Swan," $3.3 million.

7. "Burlesque," $3.2 million.

8. "Love & Other Drugs," $3 million.

9. "Due Date," $2.55 million.

10. "Megamind," $2.5 million.

___

Online:

http://www.hollywood.com/boxoffice

___

Universal Pictures and Focus Features are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of General Electric Co.; Sony Pictures, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount and Paramount Vantage are divisions of Viacom Inc.; Disney's parent is The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is a division of The Walt Disney Co.; 20th Century Fox, Fox Searchlight Pictures and Fox Atomic are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a consortium of Providence Equity Partners, Texas Pacific Group, Sony Corp., Comcast Corp., DLJ Merchant Banking Partners and Quadrangle Group; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC Films is owned by Rainbow Media Holdings, a subsidiary of Cablevision Systems Corp.; Rogue Pictures is owned by Relativity Media LLC; Overture Films is a subsidiary of Liberty Media Corp.

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LOS ANGELES — The latest chapter in "The Chronicles of Narnia" saga has sailed to the top of the weekend box office, though the franchise sank to a weak debut compared to the first two movies. "T...
LOS ANGELES — The latest chapter in "The Chronicles of Narnia" saga has sailed to the top of the weekend box office, though the franchise sank to a weak debut compared to the first two movies. "T...
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05:36 PM on 12/19/2010
Narnia was beautiful.
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TheOuroborus
It's NOT paranoia if they really R out to get U.
02:02 AM on 12/16/2010
As much as I'm sure all my fellow HuffPost addicts love Angelina and Johnnie, we could kinda see it coming.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pakaal
Pigs, in cages, on antibiotics
01:22 AM on 12/16/2010
"the [Narnia] franchise sank to a weak debut compared to the first two movies."

No big surprise there. The two most well-known books of the seven done, this odd one out now, two more that will be very difficult to produce or sell since they're only marginally connected to the Pevensies' story (Horse and His Boy and The Magician's Nephew), and then there's The Silver Chair, the Last Battle (another "conceptual" story, hard to produce--what to do about Susan for example), and it's done. Can't say they've done a very good job so far, it seemed like everything was rushed out to piggyback off the Lord of the Rings' success. Oh well, we'll always have C.S. Lewis' books, anyway.
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donbrown
A television producer in Hawaii
02:44 AM on 12/16/2010
Though your answer to me re: Harvard were scrubbed, I reso=pond on this post.

Yes... I also know some "dumb sh*ts" at Harvard and they fell into to categories —
Jocks and Family Trust grads -- which accounts for GW Bush at Yale. (prototypical).
10:27 PM on 12/15/2010
No mention of "True Grit". Can't wait to see that. Good movies do well because they're not a cash grab, a la the Tourist.
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Gigity
Neither liberal nor Conservative
09:13 PM on 12/15/2010
Did Tim Burton direct it? Is Depp a pirate? If the answer is no to both then you can shove the movie up your arse.
08:27 PM on 12/15/2010
I really enjoyed the film. I'd advise to go see it.
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donbrown
A television producer in Hawaii
07:49 PM on 12/15/2010
The film is pleasant entertainment for the undiscriminating and those with unsophisticated tastes. There are many of those in this country (though not enough to make it a hit) and on this blog apparently....

Anyone of a more literate bent will find it a laughably clumsy Hitchcock knock-off without a trace of the wit of the master.
Karama
Procrastinator
09:06 PM on 12/15/2010
Are you one of the "undiscriminating with unsophisticated taste," or are you of "a more literate bent?"
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donbrown
A television producer in Hawaii
10:55 PM on 12/15/2010
I describe it as "Hitchcock for Dummies"....'nuff said.
06:24 PM on 12/15/2010
I saw it and I liked it.
04:25 PM on 12/15/2010
Oh please. Johnny Depp and Angie Jolie....gotta see the movie....
04:09 PM on 12/15/2010
Let me put it another way, The Tourist is an Excellent movie. Jolie and Depp were spot-on, the plot was engaging, the cinematography of Venice Italy a joy. Don't listen to the critics see it. One critic once said, On Golden Pond wasn't very good. I rest my case.
10:29 PM on 12/15/2010
When only 1 out of 5 critics like it, I'll take that as evidence that it's not a good movie, though I have had personal exceptions in enjoying films that were not panned, but wholly disliked.
04:05 PM on 12/15/2010
I do not know why there is a campaign to stomp on the Tourist? I thought it was really good. Jolie and Depp were classy, and sophisticated. The plot was interesting. No the critics like creepy movies like The Wrestler, and now the dark movie The Swan. Hollywood hates class look at most of the movies they spit out. Trash. The Tourist was worth seeing, don't listen to those depressed critics.
10:29 PM on 12/15/2010
You like bright shiny objects, don't you?
03:58 PM on 12/15/2010
Angelina Jolie looks tired as if the pleasure ( . . . in what she does) is gone. Every rose has its time, I guess.
11:51 PM on 12/15/2010
That's "Every rose has its thorn." Angelina's thorn is bad acting and script choices.
06:29 AM on 12/16/2010
I disagree. My thoughts were different than what your were thinking of. I tried to delecately say "She looks exhausted and past her prime," but you had to ruin it by causing me to explain. [Snicker]
I am not a fan of her acting but admire the work she does for UNHCR. She is still a very beautiful woman.
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baileywick
03:31 PM on 12/15/2010
All actors and directors make bombs. I'll take $20 mill to do a five month shoot. It ain't Shakespeare.
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gnorrfa
emitte lucem et veritatem
03:07 PM on 12/15/2010
the mooovie stahs! america's royalty. dress them up, watch them act and put a picture on your wall. movieee stahs!
12:23 PM on 12/15/2010
I watched The Tourist and suspect that the three nominations are only to boost ticket sales after all the horrible reviews. This was a bad movie because it was a bad script which didn't didn't give the actors much to work with.

However, it was filmed beautifully and watching Angelina Jolie play a lady was fascinating. They covered up her thinness for most of the film (glad to see she is finally putting on some weight now) and she was absolutely gorgeous. It's worth watching just for the pretty, decadent views of Venice, seeing Angelina up close and catching a few funny moments from Johhny Depp. Not a great film, but enough eye candy to keep you entertained.

If they don't make enough of a profit in U.S, they will surely make it up worldwide.
06:28 PM on 12/15/2010
Agreed. The film was a bit slow in places where it didn't need to be and the pacing seemed a bit off, but it was a good story (not exactly the script, though) and the actors did what they were supposed to do, but very sedately...although, I think that is how the roles were supposed to be played. It just could have been better, but it wasn't bad.