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At the tenplex,
the year for 3D movies


More than a dozen major feature films are due out

Jan 5, 2009
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They first arrived in the '50s, accompanied by funny cardboard glasses, and they were a novelty the way hula hoops were a novelty, all the big talk one day and all but forgotten the next, the glasses, blue on one side, red on the other, tossed with the trash.

Deeply threatened by the arrival of television, Hollywood had bet big on 3D, and lost. Folks remembered the glasses. They forgot the movies.

Now, some 50 years later, 3D is back, this time with more solid expectations, and 2009 is the year they will be borne out. More than 15 major 3D movies will be released this year, including James Cameron’s much anticipated “Avatar,” after several years that saw a handful of releases.

“Starting from 2009, but stronger from 2010, 3-D will make a significant difference at the box office,” says David Hancock, head of film and cinema at Screen Digest, a London firm of media analysts.

Though movies have held up well this far into the recession, Hollywood needs a boost to keep growing its share of the entertainment dollar against rising competition. This time around, TV is but one of a slew of distractions.

Box office revenues finished out 2008 at near-record levels, down just 0.06 percent, to $9.616 billion compared to 2007’s record of $9.622 billion. But ticket sales were down 3.84 percent, according to box office tracker Exhibitor Relations.

The big Hollywood studios are looking to 3D to bring Americans back to the tenplex. The technology's big advantage is that is cannot be replicated by home entertainment systems.

“They are really banking on that to rally the industry over the next few years. They are hoping to throw in something that audiences haven’t seen before and can’t do with home entertainment,” says Jeff Bock, analyst at Exhibitor Relations.

So far, this second wave of 3D films has done well, with people paying a premium of $3 to $5 to at the box office. The big question is whether Americans will accept those higher ticket costs as the recession deepens. And will they support not one or two films a year but a whole slew of them?

Conventional wisdom says that people still go to the movies when things get tough but the fear is that they will cut back on the number they see.

One thing in the industry’s favor this year is a strong lineup of movies, and that promises another buoyant year for the box office. One forecaster sees revenue up 5 percent or 6 percent and ticket sales up marginally.

The big-name movies really kick off in March when “The Watchmen,” based on a classic graphic novel of the same name, hits the screens. While directed by Zack Snyder, who did “300,” the movie is considered risky for Warner Bros. because it's R-rated, which is unusual for a comic book adaptation.

“Monsters vs. Aliens,” a CGI movie with a cast including Seth Rogen and Reese Witherspoon, is also due out in March in a 3D version. It will air a 3D commercial during the Super Bowl.

In May, when the summer blockbusters really start coming out, there’s the comedy and action flick “Night at the Museum 2: Battle of the Smithsonian” and J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek,” which tells the story leading up to the events portrayed in the TV series. There’s also Ron Howard’s “Angels and Demons,” based on a book by Dan Brown of “The Da Vinci Code,” and “X-Men Origins: Wolverine.”

Then later in the summer “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” arrives on screens in 3D. A sequel to the 2007 blockbuster “Transformers” also comes out that month, this one called “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.” Also out is the long-awaited “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” which is expected to have some segments in 3-D.

And, of course, at the tail end of the year there’s Cameron’s 3D film “Avatar,” as well as another 3D movie, “A Christmas Carol,” directed by Robert Zemeckis.

“If you look at the slate of films, it is very strong. That is one positive thing,” says Bock. "They definitely have the material. Now it’s just will they have the audience."

***

Meanwhile, elsewhere in popcult, “Marley & Me” was at No. 1 at the box office over the weekend, bringing in $24.1 million. “Bedtime Stories” remained at No. 2 with $20.3 million in ticket sales.
 
In DVD rentals for the week ended Dec. 28, according to IMDb.com, “Burn After Reading” jumped from No. 11 to No. 1, followed by “Death Race.”
 
On iTunes this morning, Lady GaGa’s “Just Dance” was No. 1, followed by Beyonce’s “Single Ladies.”
 
And in books, Patricia Cornwell’s “Scarpetta” moved to No. 1 on The New York Times’ hardcover fiction best-sellers list for the week ended Dec. 27, although it fell out of the top 10 on USA Today’s book chart for the week ended Dec. 28.

TOP MOVIES
Weekend Box Office Estimates
Weekend of Jan. 2-4, 2009

Rank

MOVIE

Engagements

Box office (millions)

1

Marley & Me (Fox)

3,505

$24.05

2

Bedtime Stories ( Buena Vista)

3,684

$20.32

3

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button ( Paramount)

2,988

$18.40

4

Valkyrie (MGM)

2,778

$14.04

5

Yes Man (Warner Bros.)

3,434

$13.85

6

Seven Pounds (Sony)

2,758

$10.00

7

The Tale of Despereaux (Universal)

3,091

$7.02

8

Doubt (Miramax)

1,287

$5.03

9

The Day the Earth Stood Still (Fox)

2,337

$4.85

10

Slumdog Millionaire (Fox Searchlight)

612

$4.77

Source: Yahoo Movies

  

IMDb TOP DVD RENTALS
Week ending Dec. 28, 2008

Rank

TITLE

Last week

1

Burn After Reading

11

2

Death Race

14

3

The Dark Knight

2

4

Eagle Eye

-

5

Mamma Mia!

3

6

The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor

1

7

Traitor

6

8

Wanted

4

9

Step Brothers

5

10

Horton Hears a Who!

7

Source: IMDB

 

ITUNES TOP 10 SONG DOWNLOADS
for week ended Monday, Jan. 4, 2009

Rank

TITLE

1

Just Dance, Lady GaGa

2

Single Ladies, Beyonce

3

Love Story, Taylor Swift

4

Hot N Cold, Katy Perry

5

Heartless, Kanye West

6

Circus, Britney Spears

7

I’m Yours, Jason Mraz

8

Love Lockdown, Kanye West

9

Womanizer, Britney Spears

10

If I Were a Boy, Beyonce

Source: iTunes

 

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING BOOKS
Week ending December 27, 2008

Fiction (hardback)

Rank

TITLE

Last week

Weeks on chart

1

Scarpetta by Patricia Cornwell

2

4

2

Cross Country by James Patterson

3

6

3

The Christmas Sweater by Glenn Beck with Kevin Balfe and Jason Wright

1

7

4

The Story of Edgar Sawtelle by David Wroblewski

4

29

5

The Host by Stephanie Meyer

5

35

Nonfiction (hardback)

1

Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell

1

6

2

Dewey by Vicki Myron with Bret Wittner

2

15

3

American Lion by Jon Meacham

3

7

4

A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity by Bill O’Reilly

4

14

5

Too Fat to Fish by Artie Lange with Anthony Bozza

5

7

Fiction (paperback)

1

The Shack by William P. Young

1

32

2

A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini

2

5

3

The Appeal by John Grisham

3

6

4

Change of Heart by Jodi Picoult

4

4

5

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz

-

17

Nonfiction (paperback)

1

Marley & Me by John Grogan

1

42

2

The Audacity of Hope by Barack Obama

3

53

3

Dreams From My Father by Barack Obama

2

128

4

Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin

4

22

5

Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin

5

100

Source: New York Times

 

USA TODAY BESTSELLING BOOKS
Week ending December 28, 2008

Rank

TITLE

Last week

1

Twilight by Stephanie Meyer

1

2

New Moon by Stephanie Meyer

3

3

Eclipse by Stephanie Meyer

4

4

The Tales of Beedle the Bard by J.K. Rowling

2

5

Breaking Dawn by Stephanie Meyer

5

6

The Shack by William P. Young

6

7

Marley & Me by John Grogan

7

8

The Appeal by John Grisham

9

9

The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch

8

10

Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell

11

Source: USA Today

 

 

***
 
 
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Heidi Dawley is a staff writer for Media Life.




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