Posted on 01/02/2006 2:24:11 PM PST by LdSentinal
LOS ANGELES
"The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe" snatched the box office crown from "King Kong" during another fierce four-day holiday battle for the top spot.
Less than $2 million separated "Kong" and "Narnia" each of the past two weekends.
"We edged out `Kong.' It's been neck-and-neck," Buena Vista's Dennis Rice said Monday. "These are two great movies in the marketplace that are doing great business."
"Narnia" took in an estimated $32.8 million from Friday through Monday, nudging Universal's "King Kong" out of the No. 1 spot and into second with a New Year's weekend gross of $31.6 million.
"This is a great way to start the new year. We have an up weekend _ 5 percent over the last New Year's weekend," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box office tracker Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. "Propelled by these two blockbusters, it's really moving the box office."
"King Kong" was No. 1 during the Christmas holiday with a four-day turnstile take of $33.3 million; "Narnia" was No. 2 with $31.7 million.
"Narnia" passed the benchmark $200 million North American box office tally on Friday and "King Kong" was expected to pass $400 million worldwide Monday.
"Fun With Dick and Jane" was in third place with $21 million, followed by "Cheaper by the Dozen 2" with $19.3 million, a 26 percent jump over the previous weekend. Jennifer Aniston's "Rumor Has It" was fifth with $11.6 million.
"The Family Stone" was sixth with $10.2 million, "Memoirs of a Geisha" was seventh with $10 million and "The Ringer" was eighth with $8 million. Ninth place was held by "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," with $7.5 million. It has taken in $277 million in seven weeks of release.
Steven Spielberg's "Munich" rounded out the Top 10 with $6.1 million.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations. Final figures will be released Tuesday.
1. "The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe," Buena Vista, $32.8 million.
2. "King Kong," Universal, $31.6 million.
3. "Fun With Dick and Jane," Sony, $21 million.
4. "Cheaper by the Dozen 2," Fox, $19.3 million.
5. "Rumor Has It," Warner Bros., $11.6 million.
6. "The Family Stone," Fox, $10.2 million.
7. "Memoirs of a Geisha," Sony, $10 million.
8. "The Ringer," Fox Searchlight, $8 million.
9. "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," Warner Bros., $7.5 million.
10. "Munich," Universal, $6.1 million.
Thank you.
Thanks for that link. Hadn't seen that one, yet. It'll help me update my Netflix queue.
DH & I are waiting for the kids to go back to school, and then we'll play hookey and go see "Narnia" when we can have the theater basically to ourselves during the week.
Self-Employment Rocks! :)
Thanks for the links, although I didn't read the PDF file. I happened to choose a passage at random which described why it was titled, Syriana, and that was enough for me!
They're both showing impressive holding power. With Narnia shorter and in more theaters and averaging $200 less per theater I think this is a draw in the end. Lots of people are breathing a sigh of relief at King Kong coming on so strong, it was looking like it was going to be a frightful flop for a while, now it might actually break even.
The premise may have been more to our liking than it might seem on the surface. A Chinese entrance into the oil market is going to cause problems. We may even have to play some games. What I objected to was the impression that it was going to be another Prescot Bush et al slam dunk for liberal operatives. I objected to that and thought, no thanks.
I enjoyed Munich.
To Steven "Islamic Peace Prayer" Spielberg:
Hehehehehehe!!!!!!!
I'm a pastor. "Narnia" didn't have the proper release time, imho, to get the big Christmas rush that Disney hoped for. It competed with busy Christmas programs that pastors always have to run at this time of year.
Now that that is over, I'll be encouraging the church to go see the movie.
That's my explanation for the film's resurgence.
$400 million worldwide should put a grin on the producer's face. DVD sales will be huge.
Another Christian-themed movie tops the box office. When will Hollyweird learn?
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