Weekend Box Office: ‘Help’ Me, Irene

The box office was pretty tepid this week, but lucky for Hollywood PR types, they can use the Hurricane Irene roadshow to cover their losses. While the hurricane probably took a nice chunk from the overall box office, I doubt it did much to change the order of films vying for the top.

The Help was the winner for the second week in a row, turning into the powerhouse film everyone wanted it to be. This should do nothing but help Oscar buzz, as it will cross the $100 million mark next weekend (if not this week).

Colombiana was the most successful debut this week, taking in $10.3 million and claiming second place. I remember thinking the preview was interesting, but until now I forgot this movie even existed. Zoe Saldana seems like she is trying to build her name as an action star, and it may be working.

Coming in third with $8.7 million was Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark, the supernatural horror/thriller that used Guillermo del Toro’s writing/producing credit to maximum impact in the marketing…which turns out wasn’t much.

The other new debut was Our Idiot Brother, the Paul Rudd-headlined indie, which came in fifth place. It didn’t seem like it found an audience, making only $6.6 million, yet the film is already a financial “success,” gaining back it’s paltry $5 million budget.

Overall, none of the weekend’s new films were ever going to be major hits, and for now, we continue to lumber through the transition to fall’s strong roster of Oscar contenders.

All numbers courtesy Box Office Mojo.

Weekend Box Office: Everyone Drinks, Nobody Wins

Aside

I think it’s safe to say Summer is officially over at the box office folks. After a dismal weekend of returns for new films like Conan the Barbarian and Fright Night, I, for one, am ready for the Fall onslaught of Oscar contenders. Although Fright Night was a real treat, and I’m disappointed it’s not getting the attention it deserves. There’s nary a glittery vamp in sight, I promise! Go see it!

A sampling of the Box Office (Box Office Mojo):

The Help with $20 Million

Planet of the Apes with $16 Million

Spy Kids with $12 Million

Conan the Barbarian with $10 Million

Fright Night with $8.3 Million

One Day with $5.1 Million

CinemaScore: The Secret to Box Office Success?

As I get more and more into the minutiae of movie news, I occasionally come across something that really confuses me. Many times when reading about a movie’s box office performance, I’ll see a particular film’s CinemaScore mentioned.

For example, “Tate Taylor’s The Help got off to an impressive start at the Wednesday box office, grossing at least $5 million in its first day and earning a rare A+ CinemaScore from delighted moviegoers.” Or something like that. I’ve begun to wonder just what a CinemaScore is and where they come from. So I decided do a little research. Here is what I’ve found out:

A CinemaScore is a letter grade rating system as determined by the Las Vegas-based market research firm of the same name. Founded in 1982, they survey film goers attending mainstream releases on opening night for their demographic information, their letter grade review of the film, and whether they would purchase it for home video release. Since opening-night crowds are always the most enthusiastic about a release, the average CinemaScore rating is commonly assumed to be a B+, which on most scales would be quite high. Therefore, a C grade is “bad news” for studios, and is basically considered a failure with audiences. Rarely, if ever, do films earn an F from audiences. A recent example was the 2009 Cameron Diaz flop, The Box. Ed Minz, founder of CinemaScope, said audiences hated the film’s ending, which severely affected the film’s rating.

An actual CinemaScore survey - by M@sh on Flickr

CinemaScores have not always been easy to come by for the general public. Originally offered privately to studios, CinemaScores used to basically only travel by word of mouth (ironic!). However, Entertainment Weekly has been offering CinemaScores to it’s readers as far back as 1991. Back then you had to call, and there was a $1.95 charge for the first minute, and .95 each minute after! More recently, Grady Smith of The Box Office Junkie has a pretty extensive collection of CinemaScores for recent releases.

As with any film rating system, CinemaScore isn’t necessarily a determination of a film’s quality, as there have been plenty of great films that have gotten terrible scores. For example, Hanna, (which we loved) got a C+ overall. It got an A from audiences under 18, but a D+ from the over-50 crowd. Another spy tale, The American, (which we also loved) got a D-, and the rare F from women! Both of these are worthy films, and two of the more challenging major releases of the past 12 months.

On the other end of the spectrum, THR has a list of 15 movies that received the coveted A+ from CinemaScore, including last weekend’s The Help, and last year’s Best Picture winner, The King’s Speech. 

The purpose of a CinemaScore isn’t to judge a film, but to try to give studios an advance peek of what they can expect from the weekend box office. Since the Scores are usually available by 11 PM eastern, the studios can begin to prep their Sunday morning press releases when the box office estimates usually come out.

Weekend Box Office: Apes, Help

Films used to stay dominate in theaters for a long time, especially back in the days before home video, but in a summer where every weekend seems to bring another studio tentpole, Rise of the Planet of the Apes pulled a rare feat and stayed on top of the box office for a second week with $27.5 million. The new film was only the third movie of the summer to do so, after summer opener Thor and Independence Day weekend Transformers. Though the film experienced a 50% drop off, that was not as steep as other summer sequels like X-Men: First Class.

The other big winner this weekend was The Help, which brought in $25.5 million in its first weekend. This put the movie ahead of the last two August female-driven book adaptations, Julie and Julia ($20 million) and Eat, Pray, Love ($23 million), both of which had bigger star power headlining. This is extra impressive since the film actually opened last Wednesday (our review) and has taken in a quick $35 million in its first five days. Because the film is skewing toward an older demographic than most summer films, plan on this one hanging around for a few weeks, especially given the Oscar buzz already being generated.
Debuted this week was Final Destination 5, which opened to a franchise-falling $18.4 million. While it experienced the highest 3D to 2D ratio of the summer (75% of the gross was from 3D), the overall take was lackluster. This is what happens when you market the movie as more of the same…after you promised the 2009 installment was the last film in the series.

Next weekend seems wide-open, so tune in here Monday morning to see the showdown between the Conan reboot, the Fright Night remake, and Spy Kids 4D!

Review: The Help

This review originally appeared on Cinedelphia.com.

When Tate Taylor set out to write his screenplay for The Help, he must have been nervous. Kathryn Stockett’s wildly popular novel not only has a loyal fan base but a lot of detractors who felt they were being spoon-fed yet another story about helpless black victims and their selfless white savior a la The Blind Side. But The Help transcends such definitive lines in the sand by creating a story that focuses on individual characters navigating the complex and ultimately interdependent relationships between black maids and white socialites.

There are so many rich characters in this story, and subsequently more plot lines, that it can be hard to pinpoint precisely who this film is about. Perhaps it’s Eugenia “Skeeter” Phelan’s (Emma Stone) story. An aspiring journalist and recent college graduate, Skeeter returns home to Jackson, Mississippi in the early 1960s to find that being a college educated woman doesn’t get you in any closer with the ladies at Bridge club. It also puts pressure on an already strained relationship with your mother whose only wish is to see you married. She is plucky though, and lands a job at the Jackson Journal writing a cleaning advice column.

Or maybe it’s Aibileen Clark’s (Viola Davis) story, she does narrate the entire film. Aibileen is a maid in Elizabeth Leefolt’s home, where her primary job is to raise Elizabeth’s little girl. One of the interesting subtexts running through this film is the notion that part of being a member of the married social elite in Jackson (and I assume elsewhere in the South) is having children, but not necessarily raising them. Like little puppies in designer carriers, children are merely accessories needed to paint a picture of southern societal bliss, the more beautiful the better. Aibileen’s little charge is all but dismissed by Elizabeth because of her heftier-than-desired stature, leaving Aibileen to instill in the child a sense of worth I imagine she herself questions on more than one occasion. We see that Aibileen all but raises this child as her own, and consequently, the moments between Aibileen and the little girl are among the most heartbreaking in the film.

Regardless of whether the film is about these two women, or the other superb characters in the supporting cast, it is certain that the film addresses the unique relationship between them. When Skeeter gets the idea to write a book from the maids’ perspective she is met with fear from Aibileen and downright hostility from the other maids who are suspicious of her motives. Minny Jackson (Octavia Spencer) is particularly wary. As the former maid to Jackson’s social “Queen Bee” Hilly Holbrook (Bryce Dallas Howard), Minny certainly has dirt to dish but doesn’t want to be taken advantage of by the willful Skeeter. But as racial tensions heighten in Jackson, Aibileen, Minny, and the other maids begin to realize that now more than ever their voice needs to be heard.

The partnership between Skeeter and the maids is the quintessential model for the interdependence of white and black women that permeates the entire movie. The maids need Skeeter’s help in getting their stories out and Skeeter needs the stories in order to get published, but at no point is Skeeter the owner of this project. Although Skeeter asks the questions, the maids, in particular Minny, orchestrate the conversation. Because their safety is most at risk they dictate not only the time and place of their meetings, but what is to be documented and how it is presented. From the moment each interview begins Skeeter simply becomes a pen and paper. The maids clearly run the show. The process ends up being a very cathartic experience for Skeeter, who actually contributes her own story about Constantine Jefferson, the maid who raised her and was her closest confidant when her own mother was distant. We see Constantine, played by the luminous Cicely Tyson, in a series of poignant flashbacks throughout the movie.

What began as a purely self-serving endeavor for Skeeter becomes a great source of strength for herself and the maids, in particular Aibileen and Minny. I don’t doubt that Aibileen and Minny weren’t aware of their inner strength or the knowledge that they had something important to say. What they lacked was the means of getting people to listen. In the end, Skeeter did not give these women their voices, she gave them an audience.

The Help is the most significant film production set in Mississippi since Oh Brother Where Are Thou?, and Taylor creates a film that never once makes a parody of its environment or its characters. The performances in this film are nothing short of brilliant, with Oscar buzz already thick in the air. Octavia Spencer is delightful as Minny bringing with her sharp wit and pitch-perfect comedic timing. Bryce Dallas Howard is too perfect as villain Hilly Holbrook, everything down to her sweet-as-pie expressions of contempt make the audience love to hate her. Viola Davis brings the heart of the film as Aibileen, and Sissy Spacek steals every scene as the slightly loopy Mother Holbrook. And I think it is safe to say that Emma Stone has successfully navigated her way to serious dramatic actor, proving she is a force to be reckoned with in the future.

Taylor assumes that the memory of the Civil Rights Movement lingers for most, so in terms of historical backdrop we only get brief snapshots that tie us to any particular timeline, namely the assassinations of Medgar Evers and JFK. I would have enjoyed more time and place descriptors, but for a two and a half hour movie, it’s all about the characters, and their development. And given the tapestry of beautiful personalities we are given in The Help, I am more than satisfied.