MCN Blogs
David Poland

By David Poland poland@moviecitynews.com

WEEKEND REVIEW

Ah, a fresh look at a weekend’s box office. Seems like ages since I got to gorge on grosses. In the top slot, Titanic steams ahead with numbers that are still unbelievable. Titanic reported its biggest single day to date with $12.7 million this Saturday. Accomplished in its third week with no increase in screens. Titanic reported a total of another $32.2million (down just 9 percent from last week) for a grand total of $156.4million in its first 17 days of release. Paramount’s numbers on this picture continue to defy all recent box office points of reference and have to be seen as an even more shocking display than The Lost World’s$90 million opening weekend.
Lost in the wake of the Big Boat is the new Bond, Tomorrow Never Dies,which, after a $14.1 million weekend, should pass the $100 million mark late in the week. As Good As It Gets is holding steady, dropping just two percent to add $12.3 million to its total. In fourth place is Mouse Hunt,which, since its soft $6 million opening, has picked up ($8.7 millionthis weekend) with good word of mouth and has blown past Amistad ($27million to date) to become DreamWorks’ first real hit, passing the $40million mark this weekend and soon to put The Peacemaker‘s $41 milliontotal in its rearview mirror. My belated apologies to Alex for buying into negative pre-release buzz. This is a very dark, very funny movie.Too bad DreamWorks mismarketed it so badly. DreamWorks sold it as akids film and discounted the adults who grew up loving “Tom and Jerry.”They’ll find it on cable.
Of the rest of the Top Ten, there’s Scream 2 in fifth place with $8million, heading toward final numbers a little better than theoriginal. More importantly (at least for Miramax), if the sequel canhit $120 million, it should match the original’s enormousprofitability. J<strong>ackie Brown remains slow, adding another $7.7 millionfor sixth. The film’s $14 million budget assures profitability andmaybe the quiet results will allow Tarantino to work without thepressure of being the culture-maker that Pulp Fiction made him. Disney owned slots eight to 10 with a total of $14.5 million for An American Werewolf In Paris, Mr. Magoo and Flubber. Hey, it’s better than The Postman!

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Leonard Klady's Friday Estimates
Friday Screens % Chg Cume
Title Gross Thtr % Chgn Cume
Venom 33 4250 NEW 33
A Star is Born 15.7 3686 NEW 15.7
Smallfoot 3.5 4131 -46% 31.3
Night School 3.5 3019 -63% 37.9
The House Wirh a Clock in its Walls 1.8 3463 -43% 49.5
A Simple Favor 1 2408 -50% 46.6
The Nun 0.75 2264 -52% 111.5
Hell Fest 0.6 2297 -70% 7.4
Crazy Rich Asians 0.6 1466 -51% 167.6
The Predator 0.25 1643 -77% 49.3
Also Debuting
The Hate U Give 0.17 36
Shine 85,600 609
Exes Baggage 75,900 62
NOTA 71,300 138
96 61,600 62
Andhadhun 55,000 54
Afsar 45,400 33
Project Gutenberg 36,000 17
Love Yatri 22,300 41
Hello, Mrs. Money 22,200 37
Studio 54 5,300 1
Loving Pablo 4,200 15
3-Day Estimates Weekend % Chg Cume
No Good Dead 24.4 (11,230) NEW 24.4
Dolphin Tale 2 16.6 (4,540) NEW 16.6
Guardians of the Galaxy 7.9 (2,550) -23% 305.8
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 4.8 (1,630) -26% 181.1
The Drop 4.4 (5,480) NEW 4.4
Let's Be Cops 4.3 (1,570) -22% 73
If I Stay 4.0 (1,320) -28% 44.9
The November Man 2.8 (1,030) -36% 22.5
The Giver 2.5 (1,120) -26% 41.2
The Hundred-Foot Journey 2.5 (1,270) -21% 49.4