Category: External Movies (Page 40 of 336)

Weekend Box Office: “Tangled” enjoying good hair and $ days, a “Warrior” doesn’t get its way, but “Black Swan” is no ugly duckling

Everything pretty much is working out at this weekend’s box office as was predicted Thursday night. The exception being that, as a whole, the post-Thanksgiving Day letdown may be slightly bigger than expected. To be specific, as prognosticators prognosticated, Disney’s “Tangled” led the box office derby.

Showing the usual strength of well-received family-animated comedies, the film formerly known as “Rapunzel” earned an estimated $21.5 million over the weekend. The less than thrilling news here is that, as calculated by Box Office Mojo‘s indispensable weekend chart, it suffered a rather larger than usual second weekend drop for its genre of 55.9%. Still, I’m guessing we can attribute some of that to the post-holiday doldrums.

Tangled up in Rapunzel

On the sunny side of the equation, the musical action comedy is already very close to the $100 million in its second weekend, and that’s never bad. On the other hand, the typically enormous CGI animation budget of $260 million makes that kind of number seem a hair less impressive. On the other other hand, when you consider not only the the worldwide box office, but the licensing, I think it’s fair to say that “Tangled” will be another profitable feather in the ever-more-humongous Disney cap.

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Francesca Fiore in “Spy Models”

Since I failed to give fabled, violence prone Euro-screen siren Francesca Fiore her due in my new interview with her alter ego, the great Scott Thompson of “Kids in the Hall” fame, the least I can do is salute her here. Here is the lovely and talented Miss Fiore alongside Bruno Puntz Jones (Dave Foley) in a movie parody that would make Elio Petri proud.

I’ve got a Fiore-licious bonus video after the flip.

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Not funny/moderately funny: “Killing Bono” vs. “Still Crazy”

Another entry in my occasional pairing of dramatically unfunny material (usually a trailer) with something that is, at least, a bit amusing.

No time for extended commentary today, but a picture is worth a thousand words and we’ll start with this misfired trailer for a film with a premise that’s apparently much stronger than the execution. What’s it’s like to be the also-ran band from Dublin, circa 1976? (H/t Deadline)

And now we have a trailer for a 1998 comedy that also takes a backward look at seventies rock. From the dependable writing team of Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais and director Brian Gibson, here’s “Still Crazy.”

It’s not quite a laugh riot, but I know which movie I want to see, if only for the amazing cast.

Trailer time: Still “The Beaver”

One news item that Nikki Finke broke this week was that the long-delayed Jodie Foster film, which she costars in and directs, “The Beaver” looks to be getting a Spring 2011 release date. Confirming the news, Summit released a trailer yesterday, and here it is. To my surprise, this seems to be less of the black comedy I expected, and more of a straightforward psychodrama with some comedic elements.

Of course, the issue here is the film’s star, Mel Gibson, who you may have heard saying a few very impolite things. Of course, the eternal question is will audiences forgive said impoliteness. As Russ Fischer noted, there are some parallels that might help wary audiences over the hump. Who doesn’t love a redemption story? In any case, I think most people who say they’ll never see X star’s movies after X episode of misbehavior, alleged or proven, are people who weren’t fans to begin with. If the movie is something audiences think they’ll like, they’ll show and, though I’m not sure Mel Gibson is a guy I want to have the proverbial beer with anymore, I don’t believe that should be the first criteria for film attendance.

On the other hand, I seriously wouldn’t hold my breath regarding that Oscar qualifying run, at least as far as Gibson is concerned.

Happy 80th birthday Jean-Luc Godard, not that you care what we think…

That eternal bad-boy of the movies, still no stranger to controversy, turns 80 today. Ignoring the Oscars, and charges that his long-held anti-Zionism is really antisemitism, he remains a figure worth fighting over.

We open our brief salute with the trailer for the upcoming documentary, via Anne Thompson, “Two in the Wave,” the film covers the brief friendship, and long estrangement, between Godard and Francois Truffuat, who was Joe Strummer to Godard’s Johnny Rotten, the Beatles to his Rolling Stones, if you will.

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