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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

‘Jackass 3D’ sacrifices life and limb for $50 million; ‘Red’ lures in $22 million

jackass-3dStupid scored big with an estimated $50 million opening weekend for Jackass 3D, Johnny Knoxville’s third foray into theaters. The film, which lured in 15 percent more women than Jackass 2, may break the record for highest-grossing October opening of all time, if projections hold. The R-rated laugh fest will surpass Scary Movie 3, which earned $48 million back in 2003, and a single-day opening record of $21.8 million for its opening day Friday. The film scored well with audiences, mostly young males, earning a B+ from exit pollster CinemaScore.

The weekend was also successful for Red, Summit Entertainment’s adaptation of Warren Ellis’ cult graphic novel. The movie, which earned an A- from audiences, grossed $22.5 million this weekend for a second place finish. Starring Bruce Willis, Helen Mirren, and a slew of other pedigreed actors, Red drew in a primarily over-35 crowd, but that could expand with positive word-of-mouth.

Third place belonged to The Social Network, which continued to hold well in theaters its third weekend out. The David Fincher-directed flick fell only 29 percent for an additional $11 million and a three-week cume of $63.1 million. Fourth place went to Secretariat, which earned $9.5 million its sophomore session. The Diane Lane-starrer fell only 25 percent its second weekend–the best week 2 hold of any film in 2010–to put its total take of $27.5 million. And spot 5 went to the Katherine Heigl-Josh Duhamel dramedy Life As We Know It, which earned $9.2 million and a total gross of close to $29 million.

The rest of the top 5 belonged to holdovers with Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole earning another $4.2 million and a total gross of $46 million. The Town continues to hold in well, grossing another $4 million to put its five-week cume at $80.6 million. Wes Craven’s My Soul to Take lost 40 percent of its opening frame value for a weekend gross of $3.1 million and a total cume of $11.9 million. Spot 9 went to the Emma Stone-starrer Easy A, which grossed another $2.6 million for a total cume of $52.3 million. Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps rounded out the top 10, grossing $2.3 million for a total of $47.8 million.

Even with such a strong showing from the two new releases and the holdovers, the weekend was still off around 5 percent from last year at this time. Come back next weekend when Paranormal Activity 2 opens and Clint Eastwood’s Hereafter goes wide.


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