Advertisement
 
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsMovies

'The Dark Knight Rises' sends a box office reminder

'Total Recall' ($26 million) can't unseat the Batman movie, which wins for the third consecutive weekend. 'Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days' takes in a soft $14.7 million.

August 05, 2012|By Amy Kaufman, Los Angeles Times
  • Christian Bale as Batman in "The Dark Knight Rises."
Christian Bale as Batman in "The Dark Knight Rises." (Ron Phillips, Warner Bros. )

Many moviegoers forgot about"Total Recall" at the box office this past weekend, as the reboot of the 1990 amnesia classic failed to prove as memorable as"The Dark Knight Rises."

For the third consecutive weekend, the final entry in Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy claimed the No. 1 position at the multiplex. This past weekend, the film starring Christian Bale as the iconic superhero took in an additional $36.4 million, lifting its overall tally to $354.6 million domestically, according to an estimate from distributorWarner Bros.

Although the film's ticket sales are impressive, the movie has grossed about $39 million less than its predecessor, "The Dark Knight," during the same period in 2008.

PHOTOS: Billion dollar box office club

Meanwhile, a pricey reboot of the 1990 Arnold Schwarzenegger hit "Total Recall" failed to connect with moviegoers. The new version, which stars Colin Farrell as a man who toys with his memory via a chemically induced procedure, opened with a soft $26 million. That was at least more than "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days" made, as the movie took in $14.7 million in its first weekend — far less than the two prior entries in the children's franchise started with.

Overall, ticket sales were down roughly 28% compared with the same weekend last year, when "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" opened with more than $50 million. 

Though "The Dark Knight Rises" is lagging the second Batman film in the United States and Canada, it is performing at a faster pace of business overseas than "The Dark Knight" did. This weekend, the film grossed $67 million in 58 foreign markets, lifting its international tally to $378.4 million. That's 31% ahead of where "The Dark Knight" was during the same point in its release, using exchange rates from four years ago. Thus far, the movie is doing best in the United Kingdom, where it has sold more than $60 million worth of tickets to date.

PHOTOS: All-time box office leaders

"Clearly, the massacre in Denver was a huge issue to deal with on the domestic side," Warner Bros.' Executive Vice President for Domestic Distribution Jeff Goldstein said Sunday, alluding to the July 20 Colorado shooting in a post-midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises." "Moviegoing quieted down, and that opening weekend was so devastating that it's hard to bounce back from that. At the end of the day, we'll be behind domestically and dramatically ahead internationally."

Although "Total Recall" met industry tracking projections, it will be a challenge for the film to be considered a hit. Sony Pictures spent at least $125 million to produce the picture, and many of those who saw it this weekend disliked it, assigning it an average grade of C-plus, according to market research firm CinemaScore. If poor word-of-mouth damages the movie's domestic prospects, it will need to do massive business internationally to become financially successful.

The movie also draws into question Farrell's ability to lure audiences to the box office. Although the 36-year-old actor has appeared in a handful of well-received independent films, his attempts at more commercial fare have often fallen flat. Last year, he starred in a remake of the horror flick "Fright Night," which tanked at the multiplex with $18 million in sales. His last serious action-star role, 2004's "Alexander," also flopped, as the sword-and-sandals epic grossed a disappointing $34 million stateside.

PHOTOS: Costliest box-office flops

In 1990, the original "Total Recall" opened with almost as much as the reboot did: $25.5 million. The film, released at the height of the governator's popularity as an actor, went on to gross more than $260 million worldwide.

Rory Bruer, Sony's distribution president, tried to stress that the studio has always considered the reboot to be a "world play."

"I believe we're going to be absolutely happy with the final result," Bruer insisted Sunday. "We haven't really started in a big way internationally yet, but the tracking looks really terrific all over the world."

This weekend, the reboot opened in a dozen foreign territories and grossed $6.2 million. It was No. 1 in all but one location — Hong Kong — and performed best in Taiwan and Malaysia, collecting more than $1 million in each country.

The latest "Wimpy Kid" film couldn't top $20 million in its opening weekend — a feat its two predecessors were able to accomplish. But the movie received an average grade of A-minus from audiences, indicating it could maintain some momentum at the box office in the coming weeks. Plus, the movie didn't cost 20th Century Fox much to make — the film's budget was around $22 million.

Advertisement
Los Angeles Times Articles
|
|
|