Sunday, May 13, 2007

‘Spider-Man’ takes a fall but remains No. 1

LOS ANGELES - Even when he takes a huge fall, Spider-Man comes out on top.

Sony’s “Spider-Man 3” took in $60 million in its second weekend, a hefty 60 percent drop from its record debut a week earlier but good enough to easily outdistance the competition and remain the No. 1 movie, according to studio estimates Sunday.

“After a record-breaking opening weekend, to me this is an appropriate second-weekend drop,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Media By Numbers. “Any studio would be happy to have a movie opening with $60 million, let alone a second weekend with $60 million.”

With $242.1 million domestically in just 10 days, “Spider-Man 3” continued to beat the box-office pace of its predecessors. After 10 days, 2002’s “Spider-Man” had grossed $223 million, while 2004’s “Spider-Man 2” had taken in $225 million.

“Spider-Man 3” quickly became the year’s top-grossing film, hurtling past “300,” the Warner Bros. battle epic that has taken in $208 million.

Second-weekend drops for successful studio films typically are well below 50 percent. But “Spider-Man 3” shattered records with $151.1 million in its first weekend, making a big decline virtually inevitable since so many people already had seen the film.

“When you’re in that stratosphere, we had to assume we would be in the range of a 60 percent drop,” said Rory Bruer, head of distribution for Sony.

The weekend’s other new movies had fair to poor openings.

Debuting in second place with $10 million was Fox Atomic’s horror sequel “28 Weeks Later,” a follow up to “28 Days Later” that continues the story of a virus in Britain that turns people into raging, cannibalistic zombies.

Universal’s “Georgia Rule,” starring Lindsay Lohan, Jane Fonda and Felicity Huffman, opened at No. 3 with $5.9 million. Lohan plays a rebellious teen who’s put under the charge of her no-nonsense grandma (Fonda).

Estimated ticket sales for May 11-13

1. “Spider-Man 3,” $60 million
2. “28 Weeks Later,” $10 million
3. “Georgia Rule,” $5.9 million
4. “Disturbia,” $4.8 million
5. “Delta Farce,” $3.5 million
6. “Fracture,” $2.9 million
7. “The Invisible,” $2.2 million
8. “Hot Fuzz,” $1.7 million
9. “Next,” $1.604 million
10. “Meet the Robinsons,” $1.6 million

Lionsgate’s “Delta Farce” premiered at No. 5 with $3.5 million. Larry the Cable Guy stars in the comedy about three weekend warriors mistakenly dumped in Mexico, where they take on a gang of bandits.

The Weinstein Co. and MGM’s workplace comedy “The Ex” tanked with $1.4 million, coming in at No. 12. The movie stars Zach Braff as a husband dueling with a co-worker who also is his wife’s ex-boyfriend.

“Spider-Man 3” made up for an otherwise soft crop of movies. The top-12 films took in $96.9 million, up 14 percent from the same weekend last year, when “Mission: Impossible 3” was No. 1 with $25 million and “Poseidon” debuted in second place with $22.2 million.

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