Oprah helps make āThe Butlerā No. 1, while āKick-Ass 2ā disappoints
Never underestimate the power of Oprah.
Heading into the weekend, prerelease audience surveys suggested that āThe Butlerā -- the first movie the media mogul has appeared in in 15 years -- would be in a tight race with āKick-Ass 2ā for No. 1. Instead, Lee Danielsā civil-rights drama performed at the high end of expectations, debuting with a healthy $25 million, according to an estimate from distributor Weinstein Co. āKick-Ass 2,ā meanwhile, fell about $10 million short of projections, grossing just $13.6 million in its first three days in theaters.
The weekendās other two debuts proved to be major disappointments. āJobs,ā a biopic of late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, didnāt compute with moviegoers, launching with an underwhelming $6.7 million. And āParanoia,ā a thriller starring newcomer Liam Hemsworth, flopped with an embarrassing $3.5 million.
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āThe Butlerā stars Forest Whitaker as a butler who served eight presidents at the White House; Oprah Winfrey plays his wife. The picture has been a hit with critics, and opening-weekend moviegoers loved it, too, assigning the film an average grade of A, according to marketing research firm CinemaScore. Roughly 60% of the crowd was female, and the movie appealed to an older demographic, with 76% of the audience over the age of 35.
āI think we trended older because of the subject matter -- the fact that itās based on a true story interests a more educated, sophisticated crowd,ā said Erik Lomis, president of theatrical distribution and home entertainment for Weinstein Co, which distributed the $30-million production.
In exit polls, he added, filmgoers said the No. 1 reason they saw āThe Butlerā was its subject matter, followed closely by Winfrey.
āOprah Winfrey is a huge factor as to why this movie was so popular,ā Lomis said. āPeople really want to see her, and she worked very hard on it.ā
Indeed, Winfrey has been doing the media rounds to promote the film, attending New York and Los Angeles premieres, appearing on āThe Viewā and āJimmy Kimmel Live,ā filming a special about the movie for her TV network OWN and sitting for brief interviews with 52 outlets during the filmās press junket. She has not been in a major motion picture since 1998, when her period drama āBelovedā tanked at the box office.
This weekend, āThe Butlerā performed especially well in Washington, D.C. -- probably due to its subject matter -- and played well with African Americans, who made up 39% of the audience. The movie is off to a start similar to that of āThe Help,ā a film about domestic workers and civil rights that went on to become a blockbuster. After opening with $26 million in August 2011, āThe Helpā went on to collect $169.7 million in the U.S. and Canada.
Still, Lomis wasnāt ready to make a comparison between the two films: āTalk to me in four weeks,ā he said.
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As for āKick-Ass 2,ā the violent, R-rated film got off to a worse start than the original, which debuted with $19.8 million in 2010 and ultimately collected $96.2 million worldwide. Unlike that first installment, the sequel was met with largely negative reviews, but its predominantly young male crowd was kinder than the critics, giving the movie an average grade of B+.
Fortunately for distributor Universal Pictures, the movie was independently financed by producer Matthew Vaughn for just $28 million. Universal picked up worldwide rights to āKick-Ass 2ā for about $29 million last year after Lionsgate -- which released the original domestically -- opted out of distributing the sequel.
The comic-book adaptation stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Chloe Moretz as foul-mouthed teens who pretend to be superheroes and fight street crime. The movie launched in 17 foreign markets this weekend and grossed $6.3 million, performing best in Britain and Germany.
Back in America, Ashton Kutcherās portrayal of āJobsā failed to resonate with moviegoers. The poorly reviewed picture earned only a B- CinemaScore grade from its largely older opening weekend crowd. Open Road Films, the joint releasing venture between AMC Entertainment and Regal Entertainment, acquired the $13.5-million production before its debut at the Sundance Film Festival in January.
Kutcher, 35, has had a mixed track record at the box office in recent years. When heās paired with a popular leading actress, his movies tend to do better -- think Natalie Portman with 2011ās āNo Strings Attached,ā or Cameron Diaz in 2008ās āWhat Happens in Vegas.ā But his more serious endeavors in independent film havenāt caught on; his 2009 low-budget āSpreadā also tanked.
At least Kutcherās weekend wasnāt as bad as Liam Hemsworthās. The 23-year-old āParanoiaā star is known to most as a player in āThe Hunger Gamesā franchise, and after this weekend itās unlikely that will change. While his brother, Chris, is becoming a movie star with the aid of the āThorā franchise, the younger Hemsworth is not yet a box-office draw.
āParanoiaā -- Liam Hemsworthās first film in which he plays the lead -- notched just a 4% āfreshā rating on Rotten Tomatoes and received a C+ grade from moviegoers. Relativity Media, which acquired the $35-million film last year, distributed the picture about a marketing whiz (Hemsworth) who is hired to spy on a competitor (Harrison Ford) by a billionaire executive.
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