Monday, August 23, 2010

'Expendables' holds off five new releases to finish No. 1





Spoof movie "Vampires Suck" came in second at the box office this past weekend.


                                    Spoof movie "Vampires Suck" came in second at the box office this past weekend.

 With the help of a stronger-than-expected Saturday, "The Expendables" held on to first place for the second weekend in a row, beating out five newcomers that
were trying to dethrone the aging action stars.
Earning another $16.5 million, the Sly Stallone project fell 53 percent from its opening weekend, pushing its total gross to close to $65 million.
The film that got the closest to the top was Twentieth Century Fox's Twilight spoof "Vampires Suck," which grossed $12.2 million over the three-day frame. (It has grossed $18.5 million since its Wednesday opening.) The rest of the new releases struggled, most failing to crack $10 million for their opening weekend.
In its second weekend, "Eat Pray Love" held in pretty well in theaters. The Julia Roberts movie dropped 48 percent for an additional $12 million. The globe-trotting piece has now grossed $47 million after 10 days in release.
"Lottery Ticket" landed in the fourth spot for the weekend and seemed to generate good will with audiences. The Bow Wow-starrer earned $11.1 million plus an A- from exit pollster CinemaScore, which portends a strong hold for the movie going forward.
"The Other Guys" rounded out the top five for the weekend with an additional $10.1 million in its coffers. The Mark Wahlberg, Will Ferrell action-comedy has earned $88 million since its opening three weeks ago.
Spot six went to the much-hyped, rarely viewed R-rated B movie, "Piranha 3-D." Bowing to $10 million, the over-the-top bloody mess didn't score that well with audiences, earning only a C from CinemaScore.
"Nanny McPhee Returns" opened to slot seven. The sequel grossed $8.3 million, but since it's already earned north of $63 million from its international run. The kids flick, which had a $35-million budget, will end up in the black. And families seemed to respond well to the Emma Thompson-starrer, giving it an A- on the exit polls.
Despite the star power of Jennifer Aniston, "The Switch" bowed in eighth place. This romantic comedy didn't receive as wide of a release as her movies usually get and earned only $8.1 million. Audiences weren't in love with the flick either, scoring it with a middling B, according to CinemaScore.
Rounding out the Top 10 were two very different holdovers.
"Inception," in its sixth weekend of release, earned $7.6 million for a total cume of $261 million, making it one of summer's biggest successes.
Meanwhile, "Scott Pilgrim vs. The World" grossed only $5 million its second weekend in release, marking one of summer's biggest box-office disappointments.
The well-reviewed flick starring Michael Cera just isn't working with audiences and in its second weekend, it dropped 53 percent for a meager cume of $20.7 million.
It's a shame because the Edgar Wright-directed flick is one of the most original to hit theaters in a long time.

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