Film Articles

'Speed Racer' A Wreck On First Lap
'Speed Racer' A Slow Starter Overseas, Too
Sinatra Offspring Debate Whether To Make A Film About Him
Lucas Says He Reassured Spielberg About Indy Leaks
Massachusetts Revving Up Film Business

TV Articles

Cablevision Pays $650 Million For Newspaper
Broadcasting Titan Pappas Files For Bankruptcy
'Housewives' Audience Slow To Return
NBC Chief Says He'd Welcome Couric Back
Fox News Fires Staffer After She Cheers McCain
Hefner Wants Cyrus To Pose For Playboy -- When She's 18
Father Of 'Idol' Top-Three Finalist Booted Out Of Rehearsals

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Studio Briefing

12 May 2008

'Speed Racer' A Wreck On First Lap

Warner Bros.' Speed Racer was barely able to go from zero to 20 -- $20 million, that is -- and could turn out to become one of the biggest box-office wrecks in history. Most analysts low-balled their predictions at around $30-40 million, a conservative figure in itself given industry estimates that it cost as much as $300 million to produce and market. Warner Bros. estimated that it would actually end up with $20.2 million, putting it in second place behind Paramount/Marvel Studio's Iron Man, which grossed $50.5 million in its second week.That extra $200, 000 may have been tacked on in a face-saving effort to put it ahead of What Happens in Vegas, which opened with an estimated $20 million to place third. Some box office trackers forecast that Speed Racer might well trade places with Vegas when final figures are released later today (Monday).

The top ten films for the weekend, according to studio estimates compiled by Media by Numbers: 1. Iron Man, $50.5 million; 2. Speed Racer, $20.2 million; 3. What Happens in Vegas, $20 million; 4. Made of Honor, $7.6 million; 5. Baby Mama, $5.8 million; 6. Forgetting Sarah Marshall, $3.8 million; 7. Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantánamo Bay, $3.2 million; 8. The Forbidden Kingdom, $1.9 million; 9. Nim's Island, $1.3 million; 10. Redbelt, $1.14 million.

'Speed Racer' A Slow Starter Overseas, Too

Speed Racer hit the overseas market with all gaskets blowing. It earned just $12.8 million in 30 countries, to place third at the international box office, behind Iron Man, which remained the top film with a gross of $39 million in its second week. (It has now grossed $165 million overseas. With its domestic gross, its worldwide total has reached $342.1 million after two weekends.) Twentieth Century Fox's What Happens in Vegas actually earned more overseas than it did in the U.S., drawing an estimated $23 million in 36 countries.

Sinatra Offspring Debate Whether To Make A Film About Him

The three children of Frank Sinatra are at odds over a proposal to produce a theatrical documentary about the late singer's life, the Los Angeles Times reported on Sunday. The newspaper said that 59-year-old daughter Tina has been in discussions about a Sinatra film that would be directed by Martin Scorsese, who previously has helmed documentaries about The Band, Bob Dylan, and The Rolling Stones. He's also, like Sinatra, Italian-American. "He's really the only one to do it, isn't he?" Tina Sinatra remarked in an interview with the Times. Sister Nancy Sinatra, 67, however, is opposing the documentary venture, telling the Times that she is concerned that it would "dwell on the negative and ugly moments" of her father's life, to quote the newspaper. She said that she would prefer an eight- to 10-hour documentary that presumably would be shown on television as a miniseries. Brother Frank Sinatra Jr., 64, complained that he had been kept out of the loop by his sisters about the film and other matters related to his father's estate. "I'm not party to all those decisions, not like I would like," he said. The dispute came to light as the Times prepared a feature article about the singer, who died 10 years ago on May 14, 1998 and who is being honored with a postage stamp featuring his image this week.

Lucas Says He Reassured Spielberg About Indy Leaks

Director Steven Spielberg was "depressed" over the number of leaks about the plot of the upcoming Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull that appeared in the press and online and had to be reassured by George Lucas that they would not affect the film's box office, Lucas disclosed in an interview with the London Sunday Times. The producer told the newspaper that he told Spielberg that audiences would not be "coming to see the plot. They're coming to see Steve Spielberg interpret a story. You can't get that any other way than by seeing the movie."

Massachusetts Revving Up Film Business

With film making in Massachusetts accelerating since the state enacted a new package of tax breaks for producers, the citizens of Plymouth voted overwhelmingly on Saturday to build a full-scale studio in the town. As reported by the Plymouth Patriot Ledger,88 percent of voters approved the plan. It noted that the town also faces competition from Weymouth, where plans are afoot to convert a former air base into a studio, and a Quincy legislator has introduced a bill that would grant tax incentives to developers of a studio in that city.

Cablevision Pays $650 Million For Newspaper

New York-based Cablevision announced today (Monday) that it has acquired the Long Island newspaper Newsday and related properties for $650 million. The announcement came just two days after Rupert Murdoch's News Corp pulled out of the bidding, saying that the price was unrealistic. While analysts had expected shareholders to react negatively to Cablevision's expensive acquisition, shares in the company appeared to be unaffected by the deal. Cablevision CEO James Dolan said that he saw numerous synergies. "Both Cablevision and Newsday are in the content, customer relationship and advertising business, and we see this as a wonderful fit," he said in a statement. The announcement of the Newsday acquisition comes just one week after the company said that it had agreed to buy the Sundance Channel for $496 million.

Broadcasting Titan Pappas Files For Bankruptcy

Pappas Telecasting, one of the nation's leading privately-held broadcasting companies, has filed for bankruptcy. Although the company owns 30 TV stations, only 13 have been put into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. All are in medium- to upscale markets, including Omaha, Sioux City, El Paso, Reno, San Francisco, and Houston. The company indicated that its stations affiliated with the CW network had been particularly hard hit given that network's poor ratings. It also blamed the overall "extremely difficult business climate for television stations across the country," which have been required to make the costly switch from analog to digital broadcasting even as the current recession has reduced advertising revenue.

'Housewives' Audience Slow To Return

ABC's Desperate Housewives may have continued to dominate the ratings Sunday night, capturing 15.4 million viewers, but the number remained well below that of a couple of years ago when the program regularly captured more than 20 million. But then, ratings for other top network programs Sunday also showed the continuing ratings erosion since the writers' strike. (Sunday's New York Times reported that the television networks have seen six million viewers disappear since the 2007 May sweeps.) Bucking the trend on Sunday was ABC's Brothers & Sisters, which drew 11.02 million viewers to a season-finale episode following Housewives in which two gay characters were married.

NBC Chief Says He'd Welcome Couric Back

NBC chief Jeff Zucker has indicated that Katie Couric would be welcomed back at his network if CBS decides to remove her from the anchor desk of the CBS Evening News and frees her to pursue other endeavors. Zucker told the London Financial Times on Friday, "Katie remains one of the most talented journalists of her generation and somebody who would be an asset to whatever news division, whatever organization she worked in. So we would always welcome somebody of Katie's ability and stature, but that's not. ... in the cards any time in the near future."

Fox News Fires Staffer After She Cheers McCain

Fox News has confirmed that it fired 24-year-old production assistant Jennifer Locke after she was seen shouting to presidential candidate John McCain, "I voted for you in the primary. You're going to win!" as McCain stepped onto the red carpet at last week's Time magazine gala honoring the nation's 100 most influential figures. When McCain spotted her holding a microphone emblazoned with a Fox News logo, he remarked, "You're not supposed to reveal that." Intentionally adding insult to injury, the clip was aired by MSNBC's Dan Abrams on the "Beat the Press" segment of his show. The website TVNewser reported that Fox News had called Locke's remarks "journalistically unacceptable" and wasted no time booting the production assistant who had worked for Fox News for two years.

Hefner Wants Cyrus To Pose For Playboy -- When She's 18

In the wake of the row over Miley Cyrus's photo spread in Vanity Fair, Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner has indicated he would probably ask her to pose nude for his magazine in three years, when she's 18 and of legal age. Interviewed on the syndicated TV show Extra, Hefner remarked, "Sure she'd be welcome in the magazine. Very pretty lady." As for that Vanity Fair photo of her holding satin sheets around her with her shoulders and back exposed, Hefner said, "To make such a big to-do over something as innocent as those photos, I think is a reflection on how schizophrenic America is about sexuality." Separately it was reported by the website XBIZ.com that Playboy is planning to launch a video-on-demand channel aimed at gay males next month. The website quoted from a letter to Time Warner Cable from Playboy President Bob Meyers that described the planned softcore offerings.

Father Of 'Idol' Top-Three Finalist Booted Out Of Rehearsals

Jeff Archuleta, the father of American Idol top-three finalist David Archuleta, has been banned from attending rehearsals, published reports said Friday, citing a person working for the show. The report, which originally appeared on the gossip website TMZ.com, claimed that producers made their decision after Jeff Archuleta's decision to change lyrics of a song his son performed Tuesday night resulted in the program's incurring additional music clearance costs.

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