The Palm Beach Post

‘Avatar’ now U.S. domestic box office champ

By Parade   |  Sci-Fi  |  February 04, 2010

default-avatar3-D sensation Avatar has broken yet another record. James Cameron’s sci-fi blockbuster has overtaken his previous U.S. box-office champ, Titanic, to become the all-time, top-grossing film in the U.S.

James Cameron Hints at ‘Avatar’ Sequel

As of Wednesday, Avatar had grossed $601.1 million, squeaking by Titanic‘s cumulative domestic gross of $600.8 million, according to box office Web site BoxOfficeMojo.com.

‘Avatar’ Racks up Nine Oscar Nominations

Avatar has topped every weekend tally since it bowed in theaters on December 18, adding more than $30 million to its total week over week and showing little sign of a slowing down. And the film could see another bump in numbers following its recent Oscar nominations, which include Best Picture and Best Director (James Cameron).

Cameron’s eco-friendly epic could see some stiff 3-D competition in the coming weeks. Disney’s multi-dimensional, Tim Burton reboot of the classic Lewis Carroll tale Alice in Wonderland hits theaters in March.

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‘Avatar.’ What’s all the fuss about blue aliens with tails?

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Action, Movies, Sci-Fi  |  January 13, 2010

avatar_main

Don Harp is, by his own admission “not usually a sci-fi guy,” but after seeing director James Cameron talking up his then soon-to-be-released alien epic Avatar on 60 Minutes, he bought a ticket anyway.

And he was a goner pretty much as soon as the lights went down.

“The minute you put on your 3D glasses, you know it’s something special,” he gushes. “I saw it in regular 3D the first time, but this movie, the cinematography is so alive, you have to go see it and pay the four extra bucks, to see it full-blown in IMAX. I was drawn to the enormity of this film.” Read the full story

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‘Avatar’ passes $1 billion worldwide

By Associated Press   |  Sci-Fi  |  January 04, 2010

'Avatar' has seen business decrease little over the three weeks the film's been in theaters. (AP)

'Avatar' has seen business decrease little over the three weeks the film's been in theaters. (AP)

James Cameron’s science-fiction epic “Avatar” had another stellar weekend with $68.3 million domestically, shooting past $1 billion worldwide, only the fifth movie ever to hit that mark.

No. 1 for the third-straight weekend, 20th Century Fox’s “Avatar” raised its domestic total to $352.1 million after just 17 days. The film added $133 million overseas to lift its international haul to $670 million, for a worldwide gross of $1.02 billion.

“Avatar” opened two weekends earlier with $77 million, a strong start but far below dozens of other blockbusters that debuted as high as $158 million. But business for other blockbusters usually tumbles in following weekends, while “Avatar” revenues barely dropped over the busy Christmas and New Year’s weekends.

“It’s like a runaway freight train. It just keeps doing business,” said Fox distribution executive Bert Livingston. “Here’s what’s happening: I think everybody has to see ‘Avatar’ once. Even people who don’t normally go to the movies, they’ve heard about it and are saying, ‘I have to see it.’ Then there’s those people seeing it multiple times.”
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Megan Fox had big dreams as Port St. Lucie teen

By Larry Aydlette   |  Action, Celeb Stalker, Dramas, Film festivals, Sci-Fi  |  September 18, 2009

fox_pulse
Photos Megan Fox through the years
The headline on the Dec. 31, 2001, Palm Beach Post article says “Port St. Lucie Teen Shoots for Stardom .”
She’s certainly accomplished that.

Eight years later, Megan Fox is everywhere. She’s a Hollywood and Internet sensation, with her tart comments, short skirts, pouty lips and Marilyn Monroe arm tattoo. Paparazzi, blog junkies and drooly adolescents just can’t get enough of her.

She’s come a long way from being a basketball cheerleader at Morningside Academy, attending St. Lucie West Centennial High, working at a snack bar and listening to ‘N Sync and Britney Spears.

Fox was named the hottest of the hotties in 2009 by FHM magazine. Her photos are guaranteed hit-generators for any Web site. Her online ubiquity is such that one blogger created a “No Megan Fox Day” earlier this year.

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Hollywood gets serious with Oscar-worthy fall films

By The Miami Herald   |  Action, Books, Children's movies, Comedy, Dramas, Family films, Sci-Fi  |  September 04, 2009

Although there are technically a couple of weeks of summer left, the films of fall are upon us. Now is when movies get serious, when Hollywood starts thinking about Oscar. You’ll still find plenty of zombies and ninjas at the multiplex in the coming weeks, but we’ve decided to concentrate on films that might attract a serious adult audience (and, yeah, we figure you want to see the Michael Jackson concert film and the sequel to Twilight, too. After all, we do.)

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Unexpected turns make sci-fi tale ‘Moon’ a far-out trip

By The Miami Herald   |  Dramas, Movies, Sci-Fi  |  July 15, 2009

Sam Rockwell in 'Moon'. (Sony Pictures Classics)

Sam Rockwell in 'Moon'. (Sony Pictures Classics)

In the near future as depicted in Moon, Earth’s energy crisis has been solved by mining fuel from rocks on the dark side of the moon’s surface. The elaborate operation, which is run by a private company, is almost entirely automated, requiring the supervision of only one person who serves a three-year stint.

Currently holding the job is Sam Bell (Sam Rockwell), who has two weeks left before he gets to come home. Sam is eager to see his wife (Dominique McElligott) and young daughter, with whom he has communicated via taped video messages (curiously, his wife says that although she can’t wait to see him, she hopes the time Sam has spent alone has done him some good).

Sam is also eager to have someone to talk to other than Gerty, the robotic assistant that prepares his meals, cuts his hair and speaks to him in the mellifluous voice of Kevin Spacey (doing his best imitation of 2001‘s HAL). Gerty is a pleasant companion, for a machine, but ”I’m talking to myself on a regular basis,” Sam says, lamenting his need for simple human interaction.
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Does ‘Brüno’ have ‘Borat’ staying power?

By Associated Press   |  Movies, Sci-Fi  |  July 13, 2009

Sacha Baron Cohen as Brüno. (wikimedia.org)

Sacha Baron Cohen as Brüno. (wikimedia.org)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Gay Austrian fashion devotee Brüno has landed the No. 1 spot at the weekend box office, though it’s uncertain how much staying power he has.

Sacha Baron Cohen’s Brüno started big on opening day Friday but had a huge drop the rest of the weekend, with the Universal Pictures mock documentary finishing with $30.4 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

The movie took in nearly half of its weekend total — $14.4 million — on Friday, then tumbled with just $8.8 million Saturday and an estimated $7.2 million Sunday.

Revenues for hit movies typically go up on Saturday, so the nosedive for Brüno could be a sign that it lacks the shelf life that made Baron Cohen’s Borat a $100 million smash.

“It is unusual for a film to drop on Saturday. Normally, you expect the film at least to be even on Saturday or above compared to Friday, because Saturday is the biggest moviegoing day of the weekend,” said Paul Dergarabedian, box-office analyst for Hollywood.com. “It’s going to be interesting to see how it does over the long run.”

Brüno, which features Baron Cohen as a wannabe going to extremes to achieve celebrity, finished ahead of 20th Century Fox’s Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, which took second with $28.5 million. The Ice Age sequel raised its domestic total to $120.6 million.

Finishing third after two weekends in the No. 1 spot was Paramount’s sci-fi blockbuster Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen with $24.2 million, raising its domestic haul to $339.2 million. The sequel passed the $319 million total of 2007′s Transformers.

The weekend’s other new wide release, 20th Century Fox’s romantic comedy I Love You, Beth Cooper opened weakly with $5 million, finishing at No. 7. The movie centers on a high school valedictorian who uses his graduation speech to declare his love for a bombshell classmate (Hayden Panettiere).

Brüno outpaced the $26.5 million opening weekend for Baron Cohen’s surprise 2006 hit Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. Borat started with $9.2 million on opening day Friday then climbed to $10.1 million Saturday, a sign that fans were talking it up to friends.

That good word-of-mouth propelled Borat to a long run at theaters, the movie climbing to a $128.5 million domestic total.

Borat also scored its big opening weekend in far fewer theaters. Brüno debuted in 2,756 cinemas, more than three times the number for Borat.

Nikki Rocco, head of distribution at Universal, said comedies such as Brüno typically drop off over opening weekend this time of year, while Borat opened in November, when audiences are less fickle than summer crowds.

The studio will have to wait until next weekend for a sense of how well Brüno can hold up for the long haul.

“I don’t know. That crystal ball just isn’t on my desk this morning,” said Nikki Rocco, head of distribution for Universal. “Zany comedies tend to be like that, so I’m hoping that in the scheme of things, it just plays out the way zany comedies will play out.”

Reviews on Brüno were not as strong as those for Borat, which critics generally liked. There also had been questions about whether Baron Cohen’s flamboyantly gay persona might prove off-putting to audiences.

Brüno did most of its business in cities on the East and West coasts, while revenues were “softer, much softer in middle America,” Rocco said.

Even if revenues continue to plunge, Brüno is well on its way to turning a profit for Universal, which paid $42.5 million for rights to distribute it domestically and in eight other territories. “Bruno” took in $25 million in overseas markets so far, including $20 million in those Universal acquired, among them Great Britain, Australia and Germany.

Modi Wiczyk — co-chief executive officer of Media Rights Capital, which financed Brüno — said the movie exceeded the company’s expectations. Wiczyk said he had anticipated Brüno would finish in the range of $25 million domestically for the weekend.

“We don’t have talking robots or karate in our film,” Wiczyk said. “For that increasingly small subset of films that don’t have robots, we did terrific.”

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. “Brüno,” $30.4 million.

2. “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs,” $28.5 million.

3. “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,” $24.2 million.

4. “Public Enemies,” $14.1 million.

5. “The Proposal,” $10.5 million.

6. “The Hangover,” $9.9 million.

7. “I Love You, Beth Cooper,” $5 million.

8. “Up,” $4.7 million.

9. “My Sister’s Keeper,” $4.2 million.

10. “The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3,” $1.6 million.

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Jive-talking twin Transformers raise race issues

By Associated Press   |  Movies, Sci-Fi  |  June 25, 2009

Skids and Mudflap in 'Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen' (AP)

Skids and Mudflap in 'Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen' (AP)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Harmless comic characters or racist robots?

The buzz over the summer blockbuster “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” only grew Wednesday as some said two jive-talking Chevy characters were racial caricatures.

Skids and Mudflap, twin robots disguised as compact hatchbacks, constantly brawl and bicker in rap-inspired street slang. They’re forced to acknowledge that they can’t read. One has a gold tooth.

As good guys, they fight alongside the Autobots and are intended to provide comic relief. But their traits raise the specter of stereotypes most notably seen when Jar Jar Binks, the clumsy, broken-English speaking alien from “Star Wars: Episode I — The Phantom Menace,” was criticized as a caricature.

One fan called the Transformers twins “Jar Jar Bots” in a blog post online.

Todd Herrold, who watched the movie in New York City, called the characters “outrageous.”

“It’s one thing when robot cars are racial stereotypes,” he said, “but the movie also had a bucktoothed black guy who is briefly in one scene who’s also a stereotype.”

“They’re like the fools,” said 18-year-old Nicholas Govede, also of New York City. “The comic relief in a degrading way.”

Not all fans were offended. Twin brothers Jason and William Garcia, 18, who saw the movie in Miami, said they related to the characters — not their illiteracy, but their bickering.

“They were hilarious,” Jason said. “Every movie has their standout character, and I think they were the ones for this movie.”

In Atlanta, Rico Lawson said people were reading too much into the characters. “It was actually funny,” said Lawson, 25, who saw the movie with his girlfriend in Atlanta.

That was the aim, director Michael Bay said in an interview.

“It’s done in fun,” he said. “I don’t know if it’s stereotypes — they are robots, by the way. These are the voice actors. This is kind of the direction they were taking the characters and we went with it.”

Bay said the twins’ parts “were kind of written but not really written, so the voice actors is when we started to really kind of come up with their characters.”

Actor Reno Wilson, who is black, voices Mudflap. Tom Kenny, the white actor behind SpongeBob SquarePants, voices Skids.

Wilson said Wednesday that he never imagined viewers might consider the twins to be racial caricatures. When he took the role, he was told that the alien robots learned about human culture through the Web and that the twins were “wannabe gangster types.”

“It’s an alien who uploaded information from the Internet and put together the conglomeration and formed this cadence, way of speaking and body language that was accumulated over X amount of years of information and that’s what came out,” the 40-year-old actor said. “If he had uploaded country music, he would have come out like that.”

It’s not fair to assume the characters are black, he said.

“It could easily be a Transformer that uploaded Kevin Federline data,” Wilson said. “They were just like posers to me.”

Kenny did not respond to an interview request Wednesday.

“I purely did it for kids,” the director said. “Young kids love these robots, because it makes it more accessible to them.”

Screenwriters Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman said they followed Bay’s lead in creating the twins. Still, the characters aren’t integral to the story, and when the action gets serious, they disappear entirely, notes Tasha Robinson, associate entertainment editor at The Onion.

“They don’t really have any positive effect on the film,” she said. “They only exist to talk in bad ebonics, beat each other up and talk about how stupid each other is.”

Hollywood has a track record of using negative stereotypes of black characters for comic relief, said Todd Boyd, a professor of popular culture at the University of Southern California’s School of Cinematic Arts, who has not seen the “Transformers” sequel.

“There’s a history of people getting laughs at the expense of African-Americans and African-American culture,” Boyd said. “These images are not completely divorced from history even though it’s a new movie and even though they’re robots and not humans.”

American cinema also has a tendency to deal with race indirectly, said Allyson Nadia Field, an assistant professor of cinema and media studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“There’s a persistent dehumanization of African-Americans throughout Hollywood that displaces issues of race onto non-human entities,” said Field, who also hasn’t seen the film. “It’s not about skin color or robot color. It’s about how their actions and language are coded racially.”

If these characters weren’t animated and instead played by real black actors, “then you might have to admit that it’s racist,” Robinson said. “But stick it into a robot’s mouth, and it’s just a robot, it’s OK.”

But if they’re alien robots, she continued, “why do they talk like bad black stereotypes?”

Bay brushes off any whiff of controversy.

“Listen, you’re going to have your naysayers on anything,” he said. “It’s like is everything going to be melba toast? It takes all forms and shapes and sizes.”

___

Associated Press writers Damian Grass in Miami, Ginny Byrne in New York City and Jonathan Landrum Jr. in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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‘Salvation’? Heaven help us

By The Miami Herald   |  Action, Dramas, Movies, Sci-Fi  |  May 20, 2009

Every summer movie season must have its share of clanging heavy metal, and fitting the bill this year is the awkwardly titled Terminator Salvation, which has enough exploding robots, aircraft and artillery to tide us over until Transformers 2 arrives. 

 

Neither bland enough to ignore nor noteworthy enough to remember, the movie occupies that crowded middle ground of serviceable sequels that send you home feeling, if not exactly burned, then certainly unsatisfied.

This is the dourest and most humorless of the four Terminator pictures č and the serious tone weighs down the film. 

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Review: ‘Trek’ bold, but with some trouble

By Associated Press   |  Movies, Sci-Fi  |  May 06, 2009

By CHRISTY LEMIRE

Chris Pine as Kirk and Zachary Quinto as Spock in "Star Trek". (AP)LOS ANGELES (AP) — J.J. Abrams’ hugely anticipated summer extravaganza Star Trek boldly goes to the past within the distant future of the Trek universe, years ahead of the TV series and the myriad movies and spin-offs it spawned.

And in doing so, he and his longtime collaborators, writers Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman, change everything you know — or obsess about, if you’re into this kind of thing — about the kitschy pop-culture phenomenon.

It’s a daring and exciting approach that’s sure to tickle and provoke purists, while at the same time probably cause neophytes to feel a bit lost.

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