Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Box Office Update: “Hunger Games: Catching Fire” $161.1 Mil Opening Weekend

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Box office Sunday update: Lions Gate is telling Boxofficemojo.com that “Catching Fire” did $161.1 mil for the weekend. This will probably be revised down by Monday. This makes “Catching Fire” the 4th biggest opening weekend ever. If the numbers change, it will affect the standings of the two movies that come right after it– “The Dark Knight” and “The Dark Knight Rises.”

Saturday morning: “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” caught fire Thursday and Friday. The combined total of midnight showings Thursday and all day yesterday was a whopping $70.5 million. That’s pretty damn good. The first movie did $67,263,650 on its opening night, if that gives you an idea. Can “Catching Fire” set a record? That will depend on word of mouth and tonight’s showing. Right now, $70.5 is the 7th biggest opening night of all time. It pushes the original “Hunger Games” to number 11. The first six are “Harry Potter and Deathly Hallows, Pt 2,” “The Avengers,” “Dark Knight Rises,” and three “Twilight” movies.

Oscars, Movie Awards: The Field Narrows Down with Just “The Scorsese” Still Unseen

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The Oscars are coming, and the drumbeat is starting to get louder. Here’s what’s happening: On Monday we will see one of the two remaining films which has yet to be screened. That’s David O. Russell’s “American Hustle” with Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, and Christian Bale. Russell has been denied awards for “The Fighter” and “Silver Linings Playbook” in the last couple of years. So “American Hustle” is much anticipated.

That leaves just “The Scorsese,” as it is known: “The Wolf of Wall Street” is being screened on Monday night for ‘friends and family.’ Not press. After it’s shown, Scorsese heads to the Marrakesh Film Festival, where he’s head of the jury. He doesn’t get back until the first week of December. “Wolf” has a very late premiere: December 17th. But it also follows some other last minute Scorsese entries like “Gangs of New York.” Oh the drama!

Other than those two, everything else has been seen is being watched either on DVD or in the slow rollout of screenings. In the last 24 hours I’ve viewed Spike Jonze’s excellent, off beat highly inventive “Her” on DVD and Peter Berg’s ferocious “Lone Survivor” on a big screen. Each of them is terrific. And that poses the question: what the heck are we going to do? There are too many good films and not enough slots (except at the Golden Globes, where you can be a comedy/musical without a song or a laugh).

Here are the players, so to speak, in no order.

It would seem like four films are ‘in’ without a doubt. Maybe. They would be “Gravity,” “12 Years a Slave,” “Blue Jasmine,” and “The Butler.” We know them, we’ve had a lot of time with them. “Captain Phillips” would be next. I’m also including “Fruitvale Station” here because it’s headed to DVD, has been out, and is sensational. But it may be too small to make it over the finish line. “Dallas Buyers Club” will probably be more active in acting nominations. (UPDATED NOTE: “DBC” has a strong shot at Best Picture nom, but definitely Jared Leto for Best Supporting Actor, and McConnaughey could be the surprise in Best Actor.)

“All is Lost” is lost, although Robert Redford remains a front runner for Best Actor. Last night a sailor told me all the sailing stuff in “All is Lost” is wrong. I don’t know: It looked good to me. On the other hand, if it was right, how did the Redford character get in so much trouble? No one’s ever suggested before that maybe the guy was a bad sailor. Good point.

The next group are the smaller pictures, each with fervent fans: “Inside Llewyn Davis,” “Nebraska,” and “Philomena.” They should all be in. I should include Spike Jonze’s sort of quietly mind blowing “Her” in this group. Joaquin Phoenix is pure genius. The screenplay is a lock nomination for Original. The set design and cinematography are so unusual they command attention.

Then we have “Lone Survivor,” out of left field. Stupendous. The true story of Navy seal Marcus Luttrell should be the “Platoon” or “Hurt Locker” of 2013. It’s a flawless film about combat and friendship. Mark Wahlberg, Ben Foster, and Taylor Kitsch head up a superb ensemble cast. Peter Berg was obviously distracted thinking about this film while he was making “Battleship.”

Still out there and bearing down on us: The Weinstein Company is holding two cards which may be aces: “August: Osage County” and “Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom.” They are also getting big airings on Monday night. Look out because at least one of these is going to upset the apple cart. They were each seen in Toronto. But Monday night may tell us a lot, especially about “AOC.”

And then there are a bunch of really good films that can’t make it but might have in  less competitive years: “Prisoners,” “Before Midnight,” “The Place Beyond the Pines.” “42.” And so on. “Enough Said” is a charming, memorable comedy.

I’ve probably missed something here. So hang on. It’s going to get rough before it gets better.

PS It’s good thing that “Monuments Men” and “Foxcatcher” pulled out of this race. The Oscars would have had to be shown on two consecutive nights!

Thursday Night: More People Watched “Big Bang Theory” Than All the Shows on NBC Combined

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Last night: more people watched CBS’s “The Big Bang Theory” than all the shows on NBC combined. “BBT” had 18.59 million people tuned in from 8 to 8:30pm on CBS.

Over on NBC, the Peacock Network’s feathers drooped as the entire line up didn’t garner a commensurate audience. The numbers were 2.98 million for “Parks and Recreation”; 2.69 for another “Parks and Recreation”; 2.97 for “Sean Saves the World”; 2.80 for “Michael J. Fox’ and 3.1 for “Parenthood.”

The NBC total came to 15.01. That’s considerably lower than the “BBT” total. Basically almost no one is watching NBC on Thursdays. It’s hard to say if there’s anything that can be salvaged. “Parks and Recreation” is over. I hope they get to film a finale. No one cares about “Sean.” And “Michael J. Fox” — it needs a complete overhaul. “Parenthood” is the “Sisters” of this generation. No one knows it’s on.

 

Claim: “Hunger Games” Studio ‘Dumped’ Highly Praised Film With Jennifer Hudson, Jordin Sparks

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LionsGate has two movies this fall with 90% ratings on Rotten Tomatoes. “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” is about to break box office records this weekend with a possible $150 million-plus take. Maybe the studio can use some of that money on the other 90-percenter, “The Inevitable Defeat of Mister and Pete.”

Relegated to LG’s Codeblack unit–designed to handle “urban films”– “Mister and Pete” has made a startling $496,508 since its release on October 11th. Directed by the respected and talented George Tillman Jr., “Mister and Pete” stars Oscar and Grammy winner Jennifer Hudson, Jordin Sparks, plus top tier actors Jeffrey Wright and Anthony Mackie. The movie was executive produced by Alicia Keys.

A coming of age story, the film should have been embraced as a “Stand by Me” for 2013. Critics loved it when it premiered at Sundance last January. Critics loved the final version, which was tightened up and tweaked in the editing room, sources say, by Anne McCabe (“The Newsroom).”

Instead, insiders claim, it was summarily dumped. Sources –there are at least 25 producers credited– pointed out to me that on opening day “Lions Gate didn’t even take out an ad in the New York Times.” That’s when you know you’re dead, kids. “They pitched it as a ‘black movie,’ which it isn’t, and it had no ads.

(UPDATE: Sources clarified to me that it wasn’t a matter of publicity. “It was the way the movie was marketed and distributed.”)

“Alicia Keys even has a brand new song in it that would be eligible for an Oscar. But nothing happened.” The movie was also given a throwaway “premiere” in New York–basically a photo op. (I’m not sure why studios even bother with those things.)

This would certainly contradict yesterday’s hilariously weird story in The Hollywood Reporter titled “Whites Suddenly Gripped by Black Dramas.” Apparently not. No one was gripped by “Mister and Pete” because it arrived as invisible entity.

What now? A rep for Lions Gate says they decline to comment. If DVDs or even download links are sent out to groups like the Broadcast Film Critics Association there’s still a chance that the situation is salvageable. It’s unclear if any effort is being made to get the voting guilds to special screenings. “Jennifer Hudson gives a best supporting performance,” says an insider. It would be a shame if this was just another “inevitable” defeat.

Maybe Katniss Everdeen can save it.

 

Premiering U2’s New Song “Ordinary Love” for “Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom”

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And it’s really good. This song will be nominated for an Oscar, Golden Globe etc. And presumably it’s the first sign of a new U2 album. I told you that was coming in the late winter/ early spring.

Lady Gaga ARTPOP Album Drops to 17 on iTunes, Huge Second Week Drop in Sales

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MONDAY 12:43PM-– Lady Gaga’s ARTPOP sales figures for week 2 are being counted now. Expect a HUGE second week drop in sales as the album is already number 17 on iTunes. In one week it went from number 1 to 17. It’s in free fall. Not good.

 

FRIDAY: History repeats itself. Lady Gaga’s ARTPOP album is set for a huge second week sales drop. Numbers are counted on Monday. ARTPOP sold 260,000 copies in its first week. Now hitsdailydouble is saying the album will do somewhere between 25K and 50K for its second week. That would be roughly an 80% drop.

So far the record holder for second week sales drop is Madonna with her “MDNA” album. But guess who’s number 2? Why, Lady Gaga of course! In 2011, her “Born this Way” album racked up such a huge second week drop that she finishes at number 2 on the list behind Madonna.

The drop for ARTPOP would be be greater, except its first week sales were smaller than both “MDNA” and “Born this Way.”

Exclusive: “Philomena” Star Steve Coogan Had Personal Knowledge of British Illegal Adoptions

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Turns out actor-comedian Steve Coogan, who wrote and starred in “Philomena” (opening today) has some heretofore unspoken of personal experience with the elements of his movie. He was well aware of the laundries in the Irish convent where Philomena Lee was forced to slave away for some three years and where her family sent her to give birth.

“My aunt in England,” Coogan told me after a recent BAFTA Q&A in New York, “voluntarily went to one of these places in the late 1960s, but it was shameful and embarrassing. You went and hide while your belly grew and then had your baby because it was an embarrassment and a huge social stigma to have a child out of wedlock. It seems odd to us in this modern age perhaps but it was very, very real then. I was aware of those places, especially being raised a Catholic, but I knew they were dying out. I was young enough to know when I was 7 or 8 years old, even I was embarrassed that my aunt was unmarried with a baby. It was slightly embarrassing,” he said.

Later Coogan told me his aunt kept her baby.

The real Philomena Lee was on hand that afternoon because the fake one, Dame Judi Dench, has been sidelined in England with some health issues.

“When I told people Judi Dench would play me,” said Philomena, a fragile but feisty lady of nearly 80, who is the subject of the new Weinstein Company film, she tapped her head, indicating everyone thought she was loco.

The talkative and terrific Philomena Lee was at BAFTA screening recently with co-star/producer/co-writer Coogan, and producer Gabrielle Tana.  Tana said Dame Dench was eager to do the movie once she knew Coogan was involved.

“Yes, after her agent told her who I was,” Coogan cracked.

The movie focuses on a road trip Lee took with BBC journalist Martin Sixsmith (Coogan) in 20009 to find her son, who was taken away from her when he was three by Irish nuns at the convent where her family sent her to give birth. The mean nuns gave son to an American family for adoption and as Philomena begins her quest in the film he would have turned 50. (Yesterday the Weinstein Company successfully appealed to the MPAA to reverse an “R” rating to “PG-13.”)

Mrs. Lee, who went on to marry and have children told the BAFTA audience, “I couldn’t believe it when I heard Judi Dench was going to play me.” She added. “I love her as M in the James Bond films. I haven’t seen the last one.”

“Don’t tell her M dies,” Coogan whispered to the audience.

The next day at the film’s junket at the Crosby Hotel, Coogan told me the movie is based on interviews he did with Sixsmith and Philomena Lee, rather than on the book, which deals almost exclusively with the life of the missing son, while he’s hardly in the film.

The “Alan Partridge” actor added, “I didn’t want to make a film that was a polemic film attacking these archaic practices because to me, the benefit of hindsight and some sort of conceited liberal minded admonishment of people in the past is too easy and it needs to go beyond that. That doesn’t really interest me although clearly I’m angry about some of those things. I wanted to tell the story of a single, working class Irish woman. There are many people like Philomena. My mother is a little like her and my grandparents and I’ve known a lot of ladies in Ireland who are her age and I sort of wanted to celebrate that sort of stoic, forgotten women who have sustained their faith and lead quiet, unremarkable but dignified lives.” Coogan went on to say he was a lapsed Catholic.

Much of the humor of film – and there’s plenty of it – comes from comments Philomena makes about sex. How much of a challenge was it not have her come off simple or stupid I asked him?

“You have to be bold sometimes in terms of the way that you write the character to have fun and mock. You can gently mock the character that you then find heroic and then dignify. That’s ok to do that and in fact, you should do that. I want the audience to follow me up with garden path. I want to lead the audience up the garden path. I want them to think that Philomena is a slightly foolish, naive old lady so I can surprise them by showing them her intuitive quality.”

And the comments Dame Dench makes in the film about sex, did Philomena actually say them? Hearing Judi Dench say as Philomena, “I didn’t event know I had a clitoris,” is worth the price of admission.

“She did say that she didn’t know a lot about sex,” he told me, but he also conceded he invented the clitoris quote.

“I thought it would be a quite a shocking thing for her to say. She wasn’t uncomfortable,” about it Coogan said about the real-life Philomena Lee.

“The humor is that Martin is this button down, middle-aged man and his discomfort with it, that did come from the truth. She was very open about it but only because she’s actually unburdened herself. Now she talks forever and can’t shut up because for 50 years, she didn’t say a thing. It’s all boxed up. She’s still talking about it now.”

Review: Sarah Jessica Parker, Blythe Danner Sizzle in Off Broadway Play about “The Madoffs”

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Bernie and Ruth Madoff probably never imagined they’d become the stuff of celebrity drama. First Woody Allen reinvented them for “Blue Jasmine” with Alec Baldwin and Cate Blanchett as their alter egos. Now Blythe Danner is playing Ruth and Sarah Jessica Parker is a kind of Madoff son turned into a daughter off Broadway in “The Commons of Pensacola” which opened last night at Manhattan Theater Club’s smallish City Center Stage 1.

In the audience: SJP’s proud husband, Matthew Broderick; Danner’s son Jake Paltrow (who arrived from JFK after flying home from Dublin) with photographer wife Taryn Simon; writer Kenneth Lonergan, actor Frederick Weller (married to one of the play’s excellent actors, Ali Marsh), as well as “Game of Thrones” star Peter Dinklage, CAA partner Kevin Huvane, and WOR Radio star Joan Hamburg with daughter Lizzie, plus playwright A.R. (Pete) Gurney, the legendary Liz Smith who took a night out with Emmy winning producer Linda Yellen.

Plus: one our old pals, the great Treat Williams, who’s back in New York and told me: “I want to do plays.” Hello, producers! And two major directors: Joe Mantello and Walter Bobbie.

“The Commons of Pensacola” is a first time ever produced play by Amanda Peet, the actress, who’s no slouch. She’s appeared memorably in “Something’s Gotta Give” and “The Whole Nine Yards,” and in lots of TV shows and even a couple of Neil LaBute plays. So if you add her plus SJP and Blythe Danner you see why MTC’s star director Lynn Meadow directed this production, Santo Loquasto did the sets, and Jason Lyons did the lighting. Santo Loquasto doesn’t usually do sets for first time playwrights.

Something’s gotta give: Under Meadow’s superb direction, Parker and Danner, and the whole cast plays like a Bach chamber group. I don’t think Meadow (who’s won tons of awards) gets enough credit for how she handles these ensemble productions. Last season it was Jessica Hecht (who was in the audience tonight) and Judith Light in “The Assembled Parties.” Meadow knows how to do it and it’s not simple. She just makes it look that way.

The cast is really marvelous. Danner and Parker were on stage together in 1995 in the comedy “Sylvia.” You’ll want to see them now. They crackle with chemistry as mother and daughter. Carrie Bradshaw is long gone from the room; Parker is dead on as Becca, the morally conflicted daughter who’s been ruined by her Madoff father’s crime. Danner is delicious as the Ruth Madoff-ish Judy, who’s been sent to live in a condo in Pensacola, Florida with (almost none) of her former possessions or resources. Did she know what hee husband was doing to his clients? Danner told me “no” at dinner afterwards, but watch Judy and decide for yourself.

“The Commons of Pensacola” isn’t perfect. If it didn’t have all this Hollywood hoopla around it, the play might have gotten its start at Hartford Rep and a couple of other out of town percolators. A lot of the scenes don’t feel “finished,” a common problem these days for new plays that run short (this one’s 88 minutes) and have no intermission. They’re like penultimate drafts. Still, all the ingredients are so good, you can dismiss the infelicities just to see the entirety of the production in an intimate setting.

ARTPOP Poops Out: Lady Gaga Album Already Falls to Number 8

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ARTPOP has pooped out. The Lady Gaga album has already fallen from number 1 to number 8 on iTunes. Its reign at the top of the charts lasted for a split second. By Monday, when the weekly numbers are counted, “ARTPOP” may beat Madonna’s last album for the distinction falling farthest from number 1 ever. Madonna’s MDNA fell almost 85% in its second week after release in 2012.

The biggest problem with ARTPOP is no hit single. I’ve been writing about this for a couple of weeks and now I see Business Week picked up on the theme today. Gaga needs a breakout hit from that album. She currently has no song in the top 10.

“Applause” has done alright, but they are still searching for something. If only Gaga would listen to marketing people, or get a manager (or ask Troy Carter to come back). There are still a few choices on the album. But hubris may be the problem.

Brace yourselves, monsters. Monday may not be a good day in Gagaland.

No asked my advice, but this is a hit:

“X Factor” Hobbled Again in Ratings by Every Show in its Time Period

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Last night between 8 and 10pm people watched a lot of TV. But the show they watched the least was “The X Factor.” Simon Cowell’s dying on the vine contest finished last in total number of viewers in that time period. From “Criminal Minds” to “Survivor” to “Modern Family,” the evening was a blood bath for “The X Factor.” The show grabbed 5.5 million viewers. “Criminal Minds” by contrast: 12.29 million. “The X Factor” was ranked 7th for the period between 8 and 10pm, losing to shows I’ve never even heard of. (“Back in the Game”?) If tonight proves historically accurate, the “X Factor” numbers will be down again. Thursday shows are always a fall off from Wednesday. “American Idol” had better be looking at this. They’re next.