By Sarah Sluis
As we enter the last weeks of summer, the biggest blockbusters have already made their appearances. This week brings a quartet of new releases, but with all of them expected to open under $20 million, there's a chance that a strong showing from The Help could best all the new offerings.
1980s remakes Fright Night (3,114 theatres) and Conan the Barbarian (3,015 theatres) both have projected openings in the teen millions. Fright Night stars Colin Farrell as a vampire who moves to the suburbs, prompting the suspicions of a teen boy (Anton Yelchin). The horror rehash found a fan with critic Maitland McDonagh, who proclaimed the flick a "remake that retains the best and reworks the rest with a cleverness rooted in [screenwriter] Marti Noxon's (TV's "Buffy the Vampire Slayer") knowledge of and respect for the genre."
Conan the Barbarian stars Jason Momoa ("Game of Thrones") in the role made famous by Arnold Schwarzenegger. McDonagh bemoans that the filmmakers "understand the mechanics of pulp fiction while being collectively deaf to the throbbing of its thrillingly vulgar heart." The one bright spot is Momoa's performance, which puts Schwarzenegger's "locker-room camp" acting to shame.
On one day in July each year, One Day (1,719 theatres) offers a snapshot of the (un-)relationship of the characters played by Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess. Critic Daniel Eagan qualified the movie as a "gimmicky romance with a strong emotional payoff." Although the decades-long romance has its flaws, namely Sturgess' character's unlikeable qualities, it "presents its characters' struggles with enough honesty and insight to merit its weepy ending." With a smaller, targeted release, One Day is expected to open below $10 million.
One last kid-oriented picture is slipping into the summer lineup, Spy Kids: All the Time in the World (3,295 theatres). The British reviews (where it's already screened for critics) don't think highly of the movie. Now that the franchise is in its fourth installment, it's resorted to gimmickry. The kiddie caper will be presented in "4D," with audience members using 3D glasses and scratch-and-sniff cards to modify the moviegoing experience. Sounds like fun for kids, but a trial for parents.
Packed with "elegant dialogue and formidable human observation," Mozart's Sister (7 theatres) tells the story on Nannerl, a talented musician who was overshadowed by her brother Wolfgang solely because she was female. David Noh praises the performances and the movie's recreation of a period setting, which makes "you truly feel you are there." A rarely explored cinematic subject, the U.S. invasion of the Philippines, gets its due in Amigo (11 theatres), a tale with "parallels with Afghanistan and Iraq today," according to THR's Ray Bennett.
On Monday, we'll see if The Help can ascend to first place its second week, or if Fright Night or Conan the Barbarian will be able to summon enough interest in order to start out in the top spot.
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