Tuesday, January 18, 2011

'Green Hornet' buzzes to top of US box office

LOS ANGELES — Superhero movie "The Green Hornet" flew to the top of the North American box office in its debut weekend, final figures showed Tuesday, thrilling audiences with special effects but leaving some critics cold.

The Michel Gondry flick, starring favorite Seth Rogan, took in $40 million in the four-day holiday weekend -- $33.5 million for the regular weekend period -- with its tale of a young playboy businessman who becomes a butt-kicking crime fighter, according to industry tracker Exhibitor Relations.

Reviewers however panned the project as lackluster, despite a star cast featuring Cameron Diaz and Christoph Waltz, the Austrian actor of "Inglourious Basterds" fame.

Also in its opening weekend was Vince Vaughn's relationship comedy "The Dilemma," which took in $20.5 million at the box office over the four days.

Last week's top movie, Oscar-winning brothers Joel and Ethan Coen's remake of John Wayne western "True Grit," starring Jeff Bridges as the drunken, hard-nosed US marshal, slid to the third spot with a $13-million profit.

After a week of positive buzz, British historical drama "The King's Speech," featuring Colin Firth as a stuttering King George VI, soared from last week's ninth place to fourth, with $11 million in receipts.

The inspired ballet-themed pyschological thriller "Black Swan," starring Natalie Portman as a dancer in a New York company exploring the dark sides of the industry and her own sensuality, stood strong at fifth place with $10.1 million, for a seven-week $75-million total.

After Portman won the Golden Globe award for best actress on Sunday, the film is set to rake in even more in the coming weeks leading up to next month's Academy Awards.

"Little Fockers," the third installment of the Robert De Niro-Ben Stiller comedies about nightmare in-laws, meanwhile fell to sixth place from last week's number two with $8.5 million over the four days.

The epic 3-D sequel to the 1982 sci-fi cult "TRON: Legacy," also starring Jeff Bridges and his computer-generated version of his younger self from the original movie, dropped three places to seventh with $7.2 million, for a five-week total of $158.5 million.

The also 3-D and partly computer-animated family film "Yogi Bear" was in eighth place with $7.4 million while Mark Wahlberg's boxing drama "The Fighter," also starring Golden Globe winner Christian Bale, fell two places to ninth with $6.3 million.

"Season of the Witch," starring Nicolas Cage and Ron Perlman as witch-escorting knights in Black Plague Europe, rounded out the top ten after a dramatic fall from third place, with $5.4 million.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved. More »

Source: http://www.google.com

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