North American moviegoers were hungry for Hannibal the Cannibal at the weekend. “Hannibal,” a thriller starring Sir Anthony Hopkins in a long-awaited follow-up to the 1991 hit “The Silence of the Lambs,” grossed a record-breaking $58 million in its first three days of release in the United States and Canada, according to studio estimates issued on Sunday. If the numbers hold when final data are issued on Monday, “Hannibal” will replace 2000’s “Mission: Impossible II” ($57.9 million) as the third-highest bow in movie history, after 1997’s “The Lost World: Jurassic Park” ($72 million) and 1999’s “Star Wars: Episode One — The Phantom Menace” ($64.8 million).
It also set new records for a non-summer opening, an R-rated release and for a release by domestic distributor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. “I must confess I expected it to be big, but not this big,” “Hannibal” producer Dino De Laurentiis told Reuters from Berlin. Indeed most industry expectations were in the $35 million- $40 million range.
MGM distribution president Larry Gleason said he had hoped to surpass the $42 million bow of the 2000 horror spoof “Scary Movie,” which held the record for an R-rated release. The film stars Hopkins as elegant cannibal Hannibal Lecter. When he’s not disemboweling or dining on his hapless victims, he engages in a transatlantic cat-and-mouse game with FBI agent Clarice Starling, played by Julianne Moore. Jodie Foster played Starling in “Lambs,” but opted not to return, reportedly because of the new film’s violence. Ridley Scott (“Gladiator”) directed. The original was directed by Jonathan Demme.
The Term Paper on Star Traveling To The Millennium
NASA's goal of faster, better, cheaper has been the motivation for them to develop new mission concepts, and to validate never-before-used technologies in space. The new technologies, if proven to work, will revolutionize space exploration in the next century. According to NASA's New Millennium Program home page, last updated on September 16,1999, NASA's current project of Deep Space 1 ...
De Laurentiis, in Berlin for the film’s screening on Sunday night at the German capital’s annual film festival, said audiences have conferred hero status on Hannibal Lecter. “When he’s forced to kill, he kills somebody the audience wants to kill too,” he said. “‘Hannibal’ is a picture in its own. It’s a picture that will be remembered forever.” He said Hopkins, who received a $10 million-plus salary for “Hannibal,” had asked to be in a sequel. This was confirmed by MGM’s Gleason. Whereas “Silence” and “Hannibal” were based on novels by Thomas Harris, the new project would probably bypass the book stage and go straight to script, Gleason said.
As for the violent scenes, both De Laurentiis and Gleason noted that they were staged in an understated way with irony and humor. “It’s playing much more fun than violent, in a weird way,” Gleason said. “There’s a lot of nervous laughter (among the audience).” The film, which cost about $80 million to produce, was released in the United States and Canada by MGM, and will be handled internationally by Universal Pictures, a unit of Vivendi Universal. “Hannibal” opened strongly in De Laurentiis’ native Italy at the weekend, and reaches German theaters next Friday. The studios will split profits 50/50. The “Hannibal” bow is welcome news for Santa Monica, California-based MGM, which scores big hits only with its James Bond franchise. Its previous record opening was $35.5 million for the 1999 Bond film “The World Is Not Enough.” The previous non-summer record was $57.3 million for “Toy Story 2,” a November 1999 release.
(“The Phantom Menace” came out May 19, which is considered summer in Hollywood.) Elsewhere at this weekend’s box office, the romantic comedy “The Wedding Planner” (Columbia Pictures) slipped to No. 2 with $7.8 million after two weekends at No. 1. The 17-day haul for the Jennifer Lopez, Matthew McConaughey vehicle stands at $38 million. “Saving Silverman,” a low-budget teen-targeted comedy also released by Columbia, opened at No. 3 with a modest $7.4 million. “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” (Sony Pictures Classics) rose one place to No.
The Essay on Ealry Film Motion Picture
Being able to capture motion has occupied the human psyche sine primitive times. This is evident through the Lascaux cave paintings which depict buffalo with multiple legs in a attempt to represent the animal running. Other simple innovations also led to the motion picture, these 'optical toys' demonstrated the eye's persistence of vision. These 'toys' grew more advanced, but lifelike motion could ...
4 in its 10th weekend with $5.1 million. With $60 million banked so far, the Chinese-language martial arts romance has surpassed the $57.6 million total of Oscar- winning Italian comedy “Life is Beautiful” to become the highest-grossing foreign-language film in North America. Columbia and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp. Rounding out the top five was Tom Hanks’ “Cast Away” with $5.0 million. The survival saga’s total stands at $209.7 million. It was released by Twentieth Century Fox, a unit of Fox Entertainment Group Inc.
The top 12 films grossed about $107.6 million, up 49 percent from last weekend, and up 43 percent from the year-ago period, when “Scream 3” enjoyed its second weekend at No. 1.