Jane Levy inEvil Dead (she's had better days) Image by Kirsty Griffin
Hollywood has been hip to the lucrative power of 1980s horror movie nostalgia for a long while now, but rarely has an '80s horror remake done so much better than its predecessors.
Evil Dead opened this weekend with an estimated $26 million, a full $10 mil of that coming from Friday and Thursday midnight showings. Compare that opening figure to thefinal gross of 1983'sThe Evil Dead, adjusted for ticket inflation: $6.1 million. Not too shabby.
Granted,The Evil Dead was made for pocket change and rarely screened in more than a couple dozen theaters at a time. It's hardly a fair comparison. Nor is it all that fair to look at 1987'sEvil Dead II, which pulled in a total of $12.2 million in adjusted gross on just a few hundred screens. But 1993'sArmy of Darkness was made at a major studio (Universal), and enjoyed a true wide release. In 2013 dollars, its final gross was $22.4 million. The newEvil Dead will blow past that figure today.
These persnickety comparisons matter for two reasons. One, Hollywood's addiction to reviving moribund horror franchises with big-budget remakes is not dying off any time soon. And two, originalEvil Dead hero Ash (as played by horror icon Bruce Campbell) has never been closer to returning to a theater near you.
At WonderCon in Anaheim, Calif., last weekend, Campbell — who produced the newEvil Dead with original director Sam Raimi and original producer Rob Tapert — dropped a big hint for what he and his partners' intentions are for the franchise. Discussing director Fede Alvarez's decision not to bring back Ash and instead introduce five new victims into that cursed cabin in the woods, Campbell noted that "Sam was very sensitive to the idea of being able to make anotherEvil Dead with the Ash character."
If that wasn't enough to get Deadites in a lather, later in the panel, Alvarez presented a scenario that had the crowd loudly cheering before he'd even finished. "My dream — just as a fan, nothing is official — is to make a sequel to this film while Sam is makingArmy of Darkness II," said the first time feature director. "And then bring the two sagas together into one final epic film." Groovy — if it pans out.
Speaking of nostalgically terrifying movie series returning to theaters, the 3-D re-release ofJurassic Park managed to scare up $18.2 million this weekend. That's not bad given audience fatigue with 3-D re-releases. But with pre-production underway forJurassic Park 4, it's a murky indication at best for whether audiences are still hungry for rampaging dinosaurs.
Here are the estimated top 10 box office figures for Friday to Sunday, courtesy of Box Office Mojo:
1.Evil Dead* — $26 million
2.G.I. Joe: Retaliation — $21.1 million
2.The Croods — $21.1 million
4.Jurassic Park 3D* — $18.2 million
5.Olympus Has Fallen — $10.04 million
6.Tyler Perry's Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor — $10 million
7.Oz The Great and Powerful — $8.2 million
8.The Host — $5.2 million
9.The Call — $3.5 million
10.Admission — $2.1 million
*Opening weekend
Note: The tie betweenG.I. Joe: Retaliation andThe Croods will settled Monday after studios release the final figures.
Visit the source: http://www.buzzfeed.com/adambvary/the-evil-dead-franchise-is-alive-alive
Article author: adambvary
No comments:
Post a Comment