Showing posts with label I Can Do Bad All By Myself. Show all posts
Showing posts with label I Can Do Bad All By Myself. Show all posts

Monday, September 14, 2009

'I Can Do Bad' makes good with $24 million opening


By Sarah Sluis

"Part musical, part love story, part family melodrama, part inspirational treacle," Tyler Perry's I Can Do Bad All By Myself won over the box office with a $24 million weekend take. With a targeted release of 2,255 screens, each auditorium brought in $10,656. While the opening weekend comes in below Perry's I can do bad all by myself henson February release Madea Goes to Jail, it was 37% higher than The Family that Preys, which opened the same weekend last year. The pace at which Perry releases his films, as well as their popularity, continues to astound me. He's currently filming Why Did I Get Married Too, and will take on a non-Madea project in the fall when he starts filming poetry-play For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Not Enuf, which is rumored to have an all-star cast.

Focus Features' 9 brought in $10.8 million, and because it opened on Wednesday, it already boasts a cumulative gross of $15.2 million. The early opening date likely appealed to the primarily male, 12-34 audience, which is known for turning out 9 movie green orb opening day for event films.

Neither of the genre offerings of the weekend brought in hefty audiences. Sorority Row narrowly beat Whiteout, coming in at number six with $5.2 million to Whiteout's $5.1 million.

On the specialty circuit, two environmentally themed pictures made the biggest impact. No Impact Man, a documentary of a man's attempt to

minimize his environmental impact, brought in a serviceable $7,600 per

theatre at its two locations. The bigger winner was Crude, a documentary about the environmental catastrophe caused by Chevron, which has spawned an ongoing court case and the nickname "Amazon Chernobyl." Its one-screen release brought in $16,595, and $21,823 since its Wednesday open.

This Friday, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs opens in 3D, including an IMAX release, along with Jennifer Aniston-Aaron Eckhart romantic comedy Love Happens, feminist-horror movie Jennifer's Body, and Steven Soderbergh-directed The Informant!



Friday, September 11, 2009

Tyler Perry and '9' bring promising fare to late-summer box office


By Sarah Sluis

Tyler Perry's I Can Do Bad All By Myself (2,255 screens) is a strong contender for number one this weekend, with an expected gross in the high teens to early twenties. His films never screen for critics, but I can_do bad all by myself consistently draw in his loyal fans, who are predominantly African-American. In this movie, which is based on one of his plays, his alter ego Madea is a jumping-off point to tell a story centered on Taraji P. Henson (who was nominated for an Oscar last year for Benjamin Button). Madea (the old woman played by Perry) catches three siblings robbing her home. She drops them off at the house of their aunt, a nightclub singer who is unfit to take care of the children. Their presence, along with that of a boarder, helps change Henson for the better. With a targeted wide release, this heartwarming comedy should bring in a high per-screen average.

Animated caper film 9 opened on Wednesday in 1,661 theatres and brought in $3.1 million. The Focus Features release is rated PG-13, so it's targeted towards an older crowd intrigued by director Shane 9 doll movie Acker's sophisticated blend of "Eastern European animation, Japanese anime and such live-action visions of the apocalypse as James Cameron's Terminator films," which create a "distinct futurescape." Our critic Ethan Alter also praised the film for its "wonderful tactility. Instead of wielding advanced technology, the characters have to fashion tools and weapons out of whatever is at hand in the giant landfill that is this future Earth."

Rounding out the week's offerings are two genre pictures, Whiteout (2,745 screens) and Sorority Row (2,665 screens). Whiteout stars Kate Beckinsale as a researcher solving a murder mystery in Antarctica. Critic Stephen Farber find her "earnestness...ludicrous in a potboiler like this one," and panned the thriller's predictable ending. Those in Bubble bath hammer sorority row search of college girls screaming for their lives can check out Sorority Row. A remake of House on Sorority Row, and a lesson in karma, the horror movie centers on five attractive sisters who accidentally kill one of their own, only to be stalked to the death by a serial killer. On IMDB, one of its actors is credited as "Bra-clad sister," which just about sums up what viewers are in for.

On Monday, we'll circle back to count the spoils of Tyler Perry's next moneymaker, 9, and the battle between the ice-cold Whiteout and the scary-sexy Sorority Row.