Clicky

On The Bleeding Edge: Bleeding Edge TV 412: Monster Diamond Tears - Edge over-ear headphones

Latest Video: FilmCrunch 067: Hairspray, Chuck & Larry, Premonition reviewed

Veronica Santiago and Neil Estep review Hairspray, Chuck & Larry, and Premonition in this episode of FilmCrunch.
Play Video
Close Player   Episode Permalink Comment on this Video Subscribe to this show via iTunes, Miro, or RSS Download for: iPod High Definition

The Rite

may not currently be up for an Oscar, but it does have an Oscar winner – and a box office win.

Anthony Hopkins’ first wide release since The Wolfman cut from its top spot this past weekend. The film, which debuted during (another) East Coast weather event, managed to shovel up $14.8 million in ticket sales.

, featuring action star Jason Statham, also found a place in the Top Ten. The film – a remake of a Charles Bronson movie – opened in third place with $11.4 million.

Click to continue reading Box Office Breakdown: The Rite Exorcises a Win

Read More | Box Office Mojo

Advertisement

Secretariat DVDHere are some of the options available this week:

  • A Beautiful Mind: Blu-ray
  • Broadcast News: DVD, Blu-ray
  • The Color Purple: Blu-ray
  • Enter the Void: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind: Blu-ray
  • The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Nowhere Boy: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Open Season 3: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Red: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Saw: The Final Chapter: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Secretariat: DVD, Blu-ray

Make sure to also check out the options for this week.

Read More | Amazon

Advertisement

No Strings Attached

Pair with a star from That 70’s Show and what do you get? A Top Ten film.

No Strings Attached – last weekend’s only new wide release – topped the box office with a $19.6 million bow. The film, which features Portman and Ashton Kutcher, gave Natalie – someone who has avoided romantic comedies -- her best debut since 2006’s V for Vendetta.

As for Black Swan, Portman’s film with 70’s Show actress – that film slipped one notch down to sixth place over the weekend. You can expect a possible boost for the thriller after Oscar nominations are announced Tuesday morning.

Click to continue reading Box Office Breakdown: Portman Scores with Kutcher and Kunis

Read More | Box Office Mojo

Advertisement

Green Hornet

, starring Seth Rogen and Jay Chou, brought in a lot green for Sony this weekend. Although the film came nowhere near its $110 million budget, Hornet did earn enough ($33.5 million) to make it the second-best grosser ever during the MLK Jr. holiday frame. (Cloverfield earned $40.1 million over its first three days in 2008.)

Despite the combined comedic forces of Vince Vaughn and Kevin James, turned out to be more of a non-issue. The Universal entry -- which cost $70 million to produce -- failed to even crack the $20 million mark. That's the worst debut for Vaughn since 2007's Fred Claus and the worst open for James ever (if you don't count the films he only voiced).

Click to continue reading Box Office Breakdown: No Dilemma for The Green Hornet

Read More | Box Office Mojo

Advertisement

EminemEminem fell off the radar for a few years after his attention-getting role in 2002's 8 Mile, but now the rapper is back in the spotlight with his best-selling album “Recovery,” and he’s getting back in the movie game.

Random Acts of Violence will mark his return to the big screen, but he’s not stopping there. Eminem is currently working on Shady Talez, a 3-D horror film and Southpaw, a drama about boxing -- not baseball.

Scoff if you will, but some writers are already comparing Eminem to the likes of Will Smith and Mark Wahlberg. It wasn’t so long ago that both A-listers were household names because of their rap skills. Will Smith returned to rapping in 1997, but now he’s passed the torch on to his daughter. Wahlberg, perhaps anxious to put his Marky Mark days behind him, has not rapped since he became a bankable box office star.

Random Acts of Violence originally began with a Grand Theft Auto feel, but director David Von Ancken says his vision for the film is more like The Town or The Departed. In the film, Eminem plays an ex-con stuck between his old pals and the FBI.

Read More | Popeater

Advertisement

Country Strong

Gwyneth Paltrow's appearances on Glee, the Country Music Awards and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon couldn't help her film's performance at the box office.

Country Strong's first week in wide release strummed up less than $10 million over the past three days. The good news? The film only cost approximately $12 million to produce. In comparison, True Grit -- another film in its third week -- finally rode past Little Fockers for a first-place finish.

Meanwhile, Season of the Witch, the only other new entry in the Top Ten, fired up $10.6 million. That was enough to give the Nicolas Cage feature a third place debut.

Click to continue reading Box Office Breakdown: Weak Showing for Country Strong

Read More | Box Office Mojo

Advertisement

The Social Network Blu-rayHere are some of the options available this week:

  • All in the Family: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Army of Shadows: Blu-ray
  • Ben 10: Ultimate Alien: Volume 1
  • Dances with Wolves (20th Anniv. Edition): DVD, Blu-ray
  • The Endless Summer: Blu-ray
  • The Great Debaters: Blu-ray
  • Once Upon a Time in America: DVD
  • Pirahna: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Raging Bull (30th Anniversary Edition): Blu-ray
  • The Social Network: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Sordid Lives: Complete Series

Make sure to also check out the options for this week.

Read More | Amazon

Advertisement

True Grit

Their film didn't top the box office, nor did it have the best per screen average -- but Joel and Ethan Coen still have reason to smile.

, a two-time second-place finisher, has now grossed $86.7 million domestically -- a new record for the writing/directing duo. The Western, which added another $24.4 million to its total this past weekend, has officially surpassed the Coen brothers' previous record. (No Country for Old Men, released in 2007, raised $74.3 million.)

The only other notable item in the Top Ten this week was . The critically-acclaimed film replaced The Tourist in the tenth-place spot and averaged $11,108 per theater.

Click to continue reading Box Office Breakdown: Coen Brothers Show True Grit

Read More | Box Office Mojo

Advertisement

Little Fockers

A lack of a clear plot apparently meant very little to theatergoers this past weekend.

Little Fockers, which added another $30.8 million in ticket sales ($45.1 million since Wednesday) to the Fockers series, finished in first place after the holiday frame. Although the Ben Stiller/Robert De Niro production failed to top Meet the Fockers’ debut in 2004 ($46.1 million), the comedy did bring in more than the 2000 original. (Meet the Parents opened to $28.6 million.)

Meanwhile, the Jeff Bridges from the past found himself passing the Jeff Bridges from the future. True Grit, costarring Matt Damon and Hailee Steinfeld, roped in $24.9 million – the best number for the Coen brothers to date – and second place. The Western wound up landing just one notch above Tron, Bridges’ current sci-fi entry.

Click to continue reading Box Office Breakdown: Big Win for Little Fockers

Read More | Box Office Mojo

Advertisement

The AmericanHere are some of the options available this week:

  • The American: DVD, Blu-ray
  • And Soon the Darkness: DVD, Blu-ray
  • The Boy Next Door: DVD
  • Derailed: Blu-ray
  • Handsome Harry: DVD
  • The Haunting of Amelia: DVD
  • Idris: DVD
  • Legendary: DVD
  • Resident Evil: Afterlife: DVD, Blu-ray
  • Twelve: DVD, Blu-ray

Make sure to also check out the options for this week.

Read More | Amazon

Advertisement

Advertisement