Box Office Battle: Bullock vs. Black

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The last time Sandra Bullock and Jack Black had starring vehicles come out on the same day was June 16th, 2006. Bullock had ‘The Lake House,’ co-starring Keanu Reeves, and that film came in fourth place at $13.6 million. Black’s ‘Nacho Libre,’ which also had the director of ‘Napolean Dynamite’ going for it, came in second place behind ‘Cars’ with $28 million in domestic ticket sales.

And here we are again. Bullock is giving us another romance film, this time a romantic comedy co-starring Ryan Reynolds, and Black is, once again, offering up a juvenile comedy that is sure to have Black falling off of and running into things.

It is shocking to look back and realize Bullock has never had a film open to $20 million or better. Her best opening weekend take was with 2007’s ‘Premonition’ which made $17. ‘The Proposal’ looks like pretty typical fare for Bullock’s crowd, and the only extra thing that might push it past that $20 million opening mark is Reynolds. Reynolds, on the other hand, has only had one starring film (‘Wolverine’ doesn’t count to his favor) go past a $20 million opening. That was 2005’s ‘The Amityville Horror,’ which opened to $23.5 million.

In the blue corner, Jack Black has had monster opening after monster opening going all the way back to 2001’s $22 million opener for ‘Shallow Hal.’ ‘Nacho Libre’ made $28 million in its opening weekend. ‘Shark Tale’ and ‘Kung Fu Panda’ can somewhat look to be in his favor. They opened to $47.6 million and $60.2 million, respectively. Granted, those were animated films, so their numbers are cushioned a bit by parents taking children, something Black has nothing to do with. Last year’s ‘Tropic Thunder’ had three stars working towards its box office take: Black, Ben Stiller, and Robert Downey, Jr. It opened to $25.8 million, and some of that credit has to go Black’s way.

‘Year One’ also has the added bonus of having Judd Apatow’s name attached to it. Granted, he produced ‘Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story,’ which had a poor opening at just over $4 million. Apatow just had a producing credit on that film, just as he does with ‘Year One,’ and ‘Walk Hard’ marked the first, instant bomb in Apatow’s court since 2004. Other than ‘Walk Hard,’ the man has had his name attached to so many hits, his name is literally a brand.

As for the other, three films in the top five, expect ‘The Hangover’ and ‘Up’ to continue strong. The impact each of those films made when they first landed is creating quite a wave for them to ride out. ‘Up’ only had a 35.2% drop in its second weekend, and the second weekend drop for ‘The Hangover’ was only 27.1%. Expect both films to continue raking in the dough over the coming weeks. With any luck, ‘Up’ will easily move past ‘Cars’ 2006 overall take of $244 million, which will make ‘Up’ PIXAR’s biggest film since 2004’s ‘The Incredibles.’

Here’s the way I see the weekend breaking down:

  1. Year One – $29.4 million
  2. The Proposal – $24.2 million
  3. The Hangover – $22.5 million
  4. Up – $21.5 million
  5. The Taking of Pelham 123 – $12.2 million

Shoot us your numbers in the comments section below!

Review: ‘Year One’

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It was in 335 BC in his works entitled “Poetics” that Aristotle divided poetry into three categories: Tragedy, Comedy, and Epic verse.  The term “Comedy” was set by the Greeks and the Romans to mean any form of stage play that ended with a happy ending.  It was in later years that the term became synonymous with laughter.

‘Year One’ takes place long before this period of time, and, to watch it, you begin to wonder if comedy even existed before Aristotle came along.   The writers and director behind this movie, Harold Ramis, Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg, are no strangers to comedy.   Between the three of them, they have been behind such modern classics as ‘Vacation,’ ‘Groundhog Day,’ and the American version of “The Office.”  Unfortunately, the three of them together have come up with ‘Year One,’ a “comedy” only in the sense that it challenges its audience to laugh even if it never quite succeeds in doing so.

The first laugh of the movie is nothing horrible.  A group of cavemen are hunting a yak through a forest area.  They stalk their prey ever so diligently, and, just as they are ready to attack, a spear comes in from the side of the frame piercing one of the cavemen’s back.  The spear was thrown by Zed (Jack Black), a rather lethargic and unintelligent hunter.

Zed’s best friend in the tribe is Oh (Michael Cera), a gatherer who never quite knows if he is coming or going.  After partaking in the fruit of the tree of knowledge, Zed and Oh find themselves banished from the tribe, and we follow them in their adventures out into the unknown landscape of this prehistoric world.

‘Year One’ plays like the last sketch of a middle-of-the-season episode of “Saturday Night Live” strung over the course of a 90-minute frame with every kind of bathroom joke known to man.   It seems like Ramis and crew have written out a checklist of every known form of gross-out humor and go down the list, marking them off as they toss them into their screenplay. Every time the film feels like it hasn’t tried to make you laugh for 10 minutes, someone has to urinate upside down into their own face or someone else decides they have to eat bear feces as part of being a tracker.

The form of humor found in ‘Year One’ is extremely amateurish. It is amazing to consider the levels of comedy created by the people behind this movie, and that’s not even including Black and Cera who have been in some of the finer comedies over the past few years. You begin to wonder what happened in the film’s script phase that warranted this idea to throw in as many easily discarded bathroom jokes as possible.

The movie’s script does have a few moments here and there that could have, in more capable hands, come off as near great. Zed and Oh stumble upon Cain and Abel (David Cross and Paul Rudd, respectively).   They are a pair of bickering siblings, and you know how their story ends up from your Sunday school. It’s violent comedy at first when you watch Cross begin to beat Rudd with a large rock. However, the joke grows extremely weak extremely fast as Rudd’s Abel appears to be resurrected time and time again only to be beat down with increasing force. One flurry of rock smashes into the skull equals funny. Eight or nine equals mind-numbing coarseness.

Later Zed and Oh come across Abraham (Hank Azaria) just as he is about to sacrifice his son, Isaac (Christopher Mintz-Plasse). It isn’t very long before circumcisions are introduced and jokes abound about people getting the ends of their penises sliced off. Earth-shattering comedy here, folks.

Black and Cera, like most of the cast, make as much out of what they have. Black throws his crazy and arrogant gazes around whenever he can. Cera plays honest and confused better than anyone. It really is inspired casting that put these two in these roles. It is just so evident that neither they nor Ramis can get the film’s pace moving more than a meandering crawl. It is rather fitting that the film features a chase scene involving laggard yaks pulling bulky carts. It is one of only a few times the film pulls out more than a slight chuckle from its audience. Even the chuckles show themselves with decreasing frequency as the film progresses.

Oliver Platt shows up as a homosexual High Priest and Vinnie Jones makes an undersized appearance as a member of a royal army. They both do what they can with what they have, but that isn’t saying much. An early candidate for Best Supporting Performance of the year goes to Platt’s fake chest hair in a scene involving rubbing oil. It’s very gross, and it doesn’t even come close to making you laugh.

It appears Ramis, Stupnitsky, and Eisenberg’s screenplay was a victim of the Writers Guild strike, as there really isn’t much that could have been written here. The shooting schedule of the film fell right in the middle of that time, and it seems whenever they came to a hole in their screenplay, they filled it with every form of juvenile humor they could get their hands on.

In the end, that is all ‘Year One’ amounts to, a rather large hole filled with scatological comedy, an empty vessel that throws toilet humor at its audience like a monkey throwing…wait for it…bananas. Whether it is a more offensive film than the recent ‘Land of the Lost’ remains to be seen, and the comparison between the two is rather valid. Both feature a cast and crew that you would think would deliver a first-rate comedy. Unfortunately, both deliver a solid 90 minutes of injected indelicacies posing as something funnier than it is. Being on the receiving end of a stoning is more fun than ‘Year One.’ Maybe that’s pushing it, but not by much.

‘Year One’ Cut Down to PG13

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Yeah, that’s right. Â  ‘Year One’ was rated R for about a minute and a half until director Harold Ramis and producer Judd Apatow made the appropriate cuts to appease the MPAA. Â  All in all, I’d say this is a good thing. Â  It’s not like the film was going to feel like an R-rated comedy in the least anyway. Â  They may as well go for the bank and make it a little more kid-friendly.

On Tuesday, the MPAA upheld the R rating the film initally got, despite personal appeals by Apatow and Ramis. Â  At first, it seemed like the filmmakers were going to roll with the R, but, today, word came down that they had made the cuts suggested by the ratings board.

‘Year One’ comes out on June 19th.

Source THR

Despite Apatow’s Personal Appeal, MPAA Hits ‘Year One’ With an R

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Evidently, Judd Apatow doesn’t have the Spielberg clout when it comes to schmoozing the MPAA on his ratings. Â  Word came down last week that ‘Year One,’ the Apatow-produced, Harold Ramis-directed, caveman comedy starring Jack Black and Michael Cera had acquired an R-rating from the MPAA. Â  This happens more often than you think, but the MPAA generally acquiesces after an appeal or after some minor cuts to the film.

Apatow and Ramis both personally appeared before the MPAA this week to argue against the R-rating.   However, the MPAA stood their ground, and Apatow and Ramis are accepting it.   ‘Year One’ will be released as a R-rated film, the rating being for  “some sexual content and language.”

Now, this is a good thing, and it’s a bad thing if you read between the lines. Â  It’s good that an R-rated comedy is coming out. Â  We’ve had a lot of those over the past couple of years, but filmmakers shouldn’t fear the age-appropriate nature of some of their films. Â  Apatow knows this all too well. Â  His R-rated comedies are making him a ment. Â  So, it’s okay that ‘Year One’ has this rating. Â  It more than likely won’t make any less money than it would have despite.

What isn’t so great about this is the fact that they were clearly trying to get a PG-13 rating attached to the film. Â  That tells me that ‘Year One’ wasn’t a film “going for the R,” it just happened to have enough bad elements to it that made the MPAA think that’s what it deserved.

I guess we’ll see for sure when ‘Year One’ comes out on June 19th.

Source: THR

Superbowl Spots Galore!

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Tonight is the big game, but movie geeks all over the world are going to be tuned into the Superbowl to not only watch the game but to also see their first glimpses of some of this coming Summer’s biggest movies. Â  Well, folks, we have most of those glimpses right here for your viewing pleasure.

The fine folks at Trailer Addict and First Showing were good enough to post a lot of the tv spots that will run during tonight’s broadcast.

Continue reading Superbowl Spots Galore!