Category: Action Movies (Page 149 of 165)

Box Office Roundup: the world stops spinning on its axis for unworthy superhero threequel

Based on Sunday’s estimates, courtesy of boxofficemojo.com:

We’re going off the grid for the summer box office fantasy season and doing it old school, with spreadsheets and all that funky math jazz! We’re not exactly excited about doing it that way, of course. But since Fantasy Moguls adopted that whole salary cap mentality, we just can’t get behind that. So we did a draft on our own. Where the movies are owned by only one person. No free love in this here joint, suckaz.

1) Spider-Man 3: $148 million
Wow. I mean, dude, like, wow. Do they even realize what kind of precedent they’re setting for the next “Pirates of the Caribbean” movie? They’re basically saying that the next “POTC” movie could be Krusty the Klown running down a beach with a sword while being chased by a cast of thousands, and it will surely break the box office record. Wow. I mean, like, wow, dude.
6) Lucky You: 2.5 million
We’re only mentioning this so Kevin Carr doesn’t feel quite so bad about picking a movie that opens the same weekend as “Spider-Man 3.” Don’t worry, Kevin, the negative word-of-mouth on “S-M 3” will surely bring “Lucky You” into the top five….or not.

Box Office Roundup: Shia’s the man

This week’s roundup is somewhat bittersweet, as our friends at Fantasy Moguls have decided to, well, completely fuck everything up by changing the rules of their summer league so that literally everyone in the league can own the same movie. This, of course, violates the cardinal law of fantasy sports, which dictates that if I own a movie/player, then you don’t. And if my movie/player is better than yours, then you suck. Fuck, people. Do we have to start making ribbons for finishing in last place?

Based on Sunday’s estimates, courtesy of boxofficemojo.com:

1) Disturbia: $13.4 million, $40.6 million to date (David Medsker, Republicans for Voldemort)
Depending on how this weekend’s “Next” does, this could prove to be the steal of the last half of the draft. Still, Voldemort will have to settle for no better than third place, barring a miracle from their last movie, “The Abandoned,” which we’ve affectionately renamed “Battle Royale With Cheese.”
2) Fracture: $11.1 million (Bill Clark, ‘300’ Should Have Tanked)
Many of us think, “Hey, it stars Anthony Hopkins,” forgetting that he won his Oscar over 15 years ago, which is kind of like putting “Academy Award Winner Linda Hunt” in the trailer for “Stranger than Fiction.”
3) Blades of Glory: $7.8 million, $101 million to date (Deb Medsker, Punch and Pie Pictures)
Bet us now and pay us later: Jon Heder’s clock is ticking like this.
4) Vacancy: $7.6 million (Kristin Dreyer Kramer, Nights and Weekends)
“The Ring” + “The Hills Have Eyes” = fourth place.
5) Meet the Robinsons: $7 million, $82.2 million to date (Kristin Dreyer Kramer, Nights and Weekends)
Someone needs to explain to me why Bowler Hat Man was not voiced by Bruce Campbell.
6) Hot Fuzz: $5.8 million (Jason Zingale, Se7en Strangers Productions)
Tragic, this. Easily one of the funniest, most enjoyable movies of the year to date, and it finishes in sixth place? That ain’t right.
7) Are We Done Yet?: $5.2 million, $39.5 million to date (David Medsker, Republicans for Voldemort)
Staring at a 50% drop from the first installment in the “series” to the second, Ice Cube decides to literally put his foot up the ass of the Ice Cube People that “most deserved it.” The next day, there were no official Ice Cube People.
8) In the Land of Women: $4.9 million (Deb Medsker, Punch and Pie)
Totally a grudge pick for Deb, once they bumped “The Nanny Diaries” to the fall. In her press release, Deb merely uttered, “Fuck you, Seth.”
9) Perfect Stranger: $4.1 million, $18 million to date (Kevin Carr, But I Liked ‘Lady in the Water’)
Way to take a perfectly good INXS song and ruin it by association.
10) Wild Hogs: $2.8 million, $156.2 million to date (owner: Kristin Dreyer Kramer, Nights and Weekends)
Please. Don’t make us write another thing about this movie.

Standings so far:
1) Reel Times: $358.1 million
2) Nights and Weekends: $289.7 million
3) Republicans for Voldemort: $227.6 million
4) What’s All This, Then: $219.1 million
5) Punch and Pie Pictures: $174.4 million
6) But I Liked ‘Lady in the Water’: $146.4 million
7) ‘300’ Should Have Tanked: $135 million
8) Se7en Strangers Productions: $83.9 million

This week: The last weekend of our acquaintance. Lady in the Water unleashes “Next” in the hopes that the success of the god-awful “Ghost Rider” will have an impact, Punch and Pie unveils the oft-bumped “The Invisible” (not being screened for critics, whoops), and Republicans for Voldemort replace their horror flick “Wind Chill” (anyone know anything about this movie?) with “Battle Royale With Cheese.”

Box Office Roundup: The only thing grinding is Harvey Weinstein’s teeth

Based on Sunday’s estimates, courtesy of boxofficemojo.com:

1) Blades of Glory: $23 million, $68.3 million to date (Deb Medsker, Punch and Pie Pictures)
Chazz Michael Michaels is one of the greatest names in movie history.
2) Meet the Robinsons: $17 million, $52.2 million to date (Kristin Dreyer Kramer, Nights and Weekends)
Meet the second underwhelming effort from Disney’s CGI department. Now you know why they bought Pixar.
3) Are We Done Yet?: $15 million, $19 million to date (David Medsker, Republicans for Voldemort)
Ice Cube once said “Fuck Hollywood, man” at the end of the Public Enemy song. Clearly some punctuation and accenting were missing. What he really meant was, “Fuck, Hollywood, man!”
4) Grindhouse: $11.5 million (Bill Clark, ‘300’ Should Have Tanked)
No one dares ask whose bones are sitting in a pile outside Harvey Weinstein’s desk, but you can’t help but notice that no one’s seen Robert Rodriguez’s kids lately.
5) The Reaping: $10 million (Will Harris, What’s All This, Then?)
Ms. Swankalicious has to be proud of squeezing $10 million out of an oft-bumped supernatural thriller opening on Easter weekend.
6) 300: $8.8 million, $193.8 million to date (Mark Pfeiffer, Reel Times)
Kurt Russell’s jingoism be damned, we think King Leonidas would make a mighty fine Snake Plissken.
7) Wild Hogs: $6.8 million, $145.4 million to date (owner: Kristin Dreyer Kramer, Nights and Weekends)
We’re out of jokes for this one. Moving on…
8) Shooter: $5.8 million, $36.6 million to date (David Medsker, Republicans for Voldemort)
People just have no respect for the art of blowing shit up anymore.
9) TMNT: $4.9 million, $46.7 million to date (owner: Kevin Carr, But I Liked ‘Lady in the Water’)
Cowabunga. Pizza. Vanilla Ice. Moving on.
10) Firehouse Dog: $4 million (Bill Clark, ‘300’ Should Have Tanked)
Bill is now angling for that first pick in the summer draft, though Jason is out-slacking him by leaps and bounds.

Standings so far:
1) Reel Times: $330 million
2) Nights and Weekends: $222 million
3) What’s All This, Then: $193.6 million
4) Republicans for Voldemort: $137 million
5) Punch and Pie Pictures: $122.4 million
6) But I Liked ‘Lady in the Water’: $119.6 million
7) ‘300’ Should Have Tanked: $93.4 million
8) Se7en Strangers Productions: $73.7 million

This week: A whole bunch of mid-tier movies hit the multiplexes, namely “Disturbia,” “Perfect Stranger,” “Pathfinder: Legend of the Ghost Warrior,” “Slow Burn,” “Year of the Dog,” and “Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters,” among others.

Kurt Russell hates Scots and Spartans

Upon hearing that Scotsman Gerard Butler, who played the fearless King Leonidas in the smash hit “300,” has been cast as Snake Plissken in the upcoming remake to “Escape from New York,” the original film’s star Kurt Russell publicly disparaged the casting, commenting that the Snake character was “quintessentially one thing. And that is, American.”

To which we say: Settle down, Kurt. The guy held off the entire Persian army for days, using little more than a shield, a sword, and a diaper. We’re pretty sure he can handle a few surly Manhattanites.

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