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February 23, 2008
Friday Estimates by Klady

Wow... look at that line-up!!!!
Posted by poland at February 23, 2008 11:39 AM
Comments
No print ads for "Be Kind Rewind" in NYC ... an omen that New Line was throwing away a obvious loser.
Posted by: Chucky in Jersey
at February 23, 2008 12:05 PM
Truly an embarrassment of riches. Obviously everyone is home working on their Oscar pool and making Guacamole for Sunday night's first Jon Stewart zinger.
Posted by: the keoki
at February 23, 2008 12:06 PM
And Charlie Bartlett beats Larry the Cable Guy by a whole $1000!!1!!1!
Posted by: Bartholomew Richards
at February 23, 2008 12:37 PM
No surprise about "Vantage Point" topping the weekend chart.
Hope it turns out to be a one-weekend wonder cause it's an insidious pile of dung.
Repeat after me: Pete Travis is not the new Paul Greengrass; Pete Travis is NOT the new Paul Greengrass; no ****ing way is Pete Travis the new Paul Greengrass!
Glad to see that some of you bloggers share my affection for "Charlie Bartlett." Since it's doubtful that anyone will actually pay to see it in a theater, I hope that "Charlie" eventually finds an audience on dvd. The flawed but earnest "Be Kind Rewind" looks like another non-starter theatrically. But like all of Gondry's films, it should pick up a small, if passionate following somewhere down the road.
Thankfully the toxic fumes of "Witless Protection" (has there ever been a movie with such a poetically apt title?) won't be infesting multiplexes for long. The only question(s) is how/why Mamet alter ego Joe Mantegna and Bergman/Coen Brothers veteran Peter Stormare agreed to sign up. Are they really THAT hard up for a paycheck?
Strange how the "wide" break of "U2-3-D" translated into just one or two evening shows per theater where--at least in these parts--it's sharing a screen with daytime occupant Hannah Montana (fourth week and counting!). But I'm guessing "U2" will have longer legs in digital/3-D houses than Ms. Cyrus.
Looking ahead to next weekend, will "Semi-Pro" open as big as "Blades of Glory"? Or will the R-rating place it more in the "Anchorman" camp? Does the mildly (very "mildly") charming modern-day fairy tale "Penelope" have a shot at the tweener audience? Or will it be d.o.a. after sitting on the shelf for a year and half? And is Sony making a critical error by opening "The Other Boleyn Girl" wide rather than opting for a platform release?
Despite uindistinguished direction by first-timer Justin Chadwick, "Boleyn" is actually a tad better than anticipated.
Both Portman and Johansson ace their British accents and acquit themselves nicely. I think the problem audiences are going to have with the movie is that there isn't a single sympathetic character in the mix. Anne is portrayed as a conniving vixen; Henry comes across as seriously pussy-whipped; and Johansson's Mary seems like a throwback to classic female victims, even though she's the only one who gets a "happy" ending. But Bana--with that smoking hot "Troy" beard--is a total stud muffin. Bana should have a proviso written into his contract that he must be bearded (or at least goateed) in all of his movies. Without facial hair he's just kind of...dully handsome.
And "Persepolis" widened (a scooch) last weekend in northeastern Ohio. Of course, all the Regal 'plexes that opened it--day and date with the former arthouse exclusive--
dropped it to just one show a day after the first week.
Posted by: movieman
at February 23, 2008 01:20 PM
"Hope it turns out to be a one-weekend wonder cause it's an insidious pile of dung."
Vantage Point reminded me of the sort of programmer thiller that Touchstone pictures used to release at this time of the year in the late 80's like Shoot to Kill. Not bad. Not great. Actors who are well known but nobody who is really A list.
A servicable Saturday night popcorn programmer.
It is nowhere near as bad as people are saying but not great either. Although it is exactly the type of film that the crtics overtrash more due to ideological reasons that it being actual pure dreck. Much in the same way the Bourne movies are vastly over-rated for ideological reasons.
Posted by: Nicol D
at February 23, 2008 02:02 PM
"Vantage Point reminded me of the sort of programmer thiller that Touchstone pictures used to release at this time of the year in the late 80's like Shoot to Kill. Not bad. Not great. Actors who are well known but nobody who is really A list."
LOL. Touchstone was doing that through the mid-90s. Remember '95's Bad Company with Laurence Fishburne and Ellen Barkin? Released in late January.
Posted by: Wrecktum
at February 23, 2008 02:55 PM
Nicol, you're saying critics are being overly harsh on Vantage Point because of their political beliefs? I have not seen it, so I have no idea what the movie's ideology is.
Posted by: Stella's Boy
at February 23, 2008 04:16 PM
Stella, you have to be easier on Nicol. He's Canadian.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at February 23, 2008 04:40 PM
Based on my math there may have been maybe 60 screens showing THE SIGNAL to completely empty houses all weekend .... was this just another over hyped (by the geeks) Sundance genre pic that probably shouldn't have gone out theatrically at all?
Am I the only one who though Ellen Page's performance in Juno not worthy of all the hoopla.. her Hard Candy perf was worth the acclaim but she's not even the best onscreen in Juno. I even thought Garner was better!
Posted by: Jeffrey Boam's Doctor
at February 23, 2008 04:54 PM
I think the '95 Bad Company is lost gem. It was trashed by most critics as a disposable, early-in-the-year spy thriller. I think Touchstone didn't have a clue how sell a twisty adult thriller that contained one of the best sex scenes of its time. (Probably the black-white pairing scared studio executives.)
Both Langella and Spalding Grey provided solid supporting work. I think Ebert was the only major critic to see the movie for what is: a top-notch exercise in style.
Beginning of '95 was actually pretty decent. Before Sunrise, Miami Rhapsody, The Brady Bunch Movie, and Higher Learnig came out within the first six weeks of the year. And don't forget Polanski's Deaht and the Maiden.
Posted by: Jimmy the Gent
at February 23, 2008 05:32 PM
Let's be honest here. Given New Line's track record of late, we can fully expect the legacy of SEMI PRO to be the 'film where Will Ferrell finally jumped the shark'. This will probably underperform miserably, contiuning the studio's sting of bad luck (Hairspray aside).
Posted by: Botner
at February 23, 2008 06:05 PM
Does anybody know how it's tracking? I can't imagine it opening to less than $25m.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at February 23, 2008 07:00 PM
Just saw THE SIGNAL. A fine example of what you can do with clever screenwriting and directing to make up for your budget limitations. Not all of it worked for me, but it showed some real creativity and intelligence and I hope the creators are ultimately rewarded for their work as they move on.
Also saw IN BRUGES. Always great to see Gleason and Feinnes rock the casbah and probably my favorite Colin performance. Not exceptional, but nicely done.
Posted by: L.B.
at February 23, 2008 10:09 PM
Charlie Bartlett was awesome. It's a great era for comedy.
Posted by: movielocke
at February 23, 2008 11:54 PM
Christ, The Brady Bunch Movie is so amazing I can barely speak now that you mentioned it.
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at February 24, 2008 04:15 AM
Vantage Point is an epic waste of time.
Stop -- rewind that...
.emit fo etsaw cipe na si tnioP egatnaV
11:59:57am -- :58 -- :59 -- 12:00:00pm
Vantage Point is an epic waste of time.
Posted by: JBM...
at February 24, 2008 05:39 AM
Wrecktum,
Perhaps if the president were played by Nick Nolte and the secret service agent by Tom Selleck, Vantage Point would be a perfect Touchstone film for that era. Steve Guttenberg could play the tourist.
Posted by: Nicol D
at February 24, 2008 07:06 AM
But who would Kurt Russell play?
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at February 24, 2008 08:36 AM
Captain Ron, of course!
Posted by: Nicol D
at February 24, 2008 11:49 AM
Nah. Watching Jack Burton try to figure out how to rewind the assassination video would be worthe the price of admission alone.
Posted by: L.B.
at February 24, 2008 12:16 PM
JBM - thanks for a hearty laugh. By the time the fourth viewpoint story began, the audience was yelling the numbers out loud.
Re - random thoughts on Vantage Point (mega-spoilers):
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First off, I'm stunned that this film received a PG-13. Aside from the subject matter, the violence is copious, brutal, and just bloody enough to be realistic.
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My friend and I correctly guessed the mystery villain from the trailer (hint - which known actor doesn't have an apparent reason for being in the movie). And there is a dead give away right in the first ten minutes. Gee... Quaid says that control won't answer. Then Fox says that he's already talked to control. Then Quaid calls control again and they still don't answer. Wait a minute... how come Quaid can't reach them but Fox can? Besides, any story that has a bunch of evil foreigners killing civilians and police has to invariably reveal a white American as one of the lead bad guys, to even things out (24 did this every season after the first one).
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The only reason that the bad guys' plan doesn't work perfectly is that the driver of the getaway van, having already caused or ordered the deaths of hundreds of innocent people, chooses to swerve in panic so as to not run over a young child in the street. My wife and I just had a baby, so she's sometimes over-sensitive to kids in peril, and even she commented on how dumb that was.
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As Forrest Whittaker is racing through the streets, to either chase the secret service men or to save the child in peril, was anyone else tempted to shout out 'run, Forrest, run!'?
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In true chronological order, Matthew Fox spends months/years as a double agent, arranges the entire scheme, then is INSTANTLY caught on film by Dennis Quaid right as the plan goes into motion.
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The entire climactic car chase was pointless as the President was not in the car being chased and the occupants of said car perished without giving our heroes any information of substance.
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When we finally find out what happened to the alleged Mayor's bodyguard, ask yourself what happened to Richard T Jones and the other secret service agent that were right behind him in the previous 'viewpoint'.
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Casting Bruce McGill as a red-shirt secret service agent wrongly led me to believe that he wasn't quite dead. Still, he helped make that viewpoint my favorite segment of the film (of course he was also a red shirt cop in Cliffhanger, but he wasn't the crusty dependable character actor that he is now).
Scott Mendelson
Posted by: Scott Mendelson
at February 24, 2008 01:15 PM
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