Advertisement

‘K-PAX’ Goes One Step Beyond

Share
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Aliens and ghosts dominated the box office this weekend as the mental-ward drama “K-PAX,” starring Jeff Bridges and Kevin Spacey--as a possible visitor from space--took in $17.5 million to premiere as the No. 1 film.

A close second was the Halloween horror remake “13 Ghosts,” which grossed $15.7 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. Last weekend’s top film, “From Hell,” slipped to third place, with $6.1 million.

Another ghost tale, rapper Snoop Dogg’s “Bones,” had a modest opening of $2.95 million, premiering at No. 9.

Advertisement

“On the Line,” a romantic comedy featuring Lance Bass and Joey Fatone of ‘N Sync, opened weakly in 11th place with $2.3 million.

Kevin Kline’s “Life as a House,” in which he plays a dying architect trying to make amends to his neglected family, opened well in limited release, grossing $294,000 in 29 locations for a strong average of $10,138 a theater.

The bank-robbery comedy “High Heels and Low Lifes,” starring Minnie Driver and Mary McCormack, bombed in limited release, taking in $149,224 at 175 theaters for a dismal $648 average.

Overall, box-office revenues rose slightly. The top 12 films grossed $73.4 million, up 3.4% from the same weekend last year.

It was the last quiet weekend at the box office for a while. Big holiday-season films begin hitting next week with “Monsters, Inc.,” an animated tale from the makers of the “Toy Story” movies. The following weekend brings the Farrelly brothers’ latest comedy, “Shallow Hal,” starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Jack Black. And one of the year’s most anticipated movies, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” opens a week after that.

Hollywood has had a solid fall season so far, despite the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, which prompted the industry to shuffle its schedule and postpone movies with terrorism elements. Since the attacks, movie revenues are up 6% to 7% from the same period a year ago, said Paul Dergarabedian, president of Exhibitor Relations, which tracks the box office.

Advertisement

“This was a strong post-Labor Day period, considering what’s been going on in the world,” Dergarabedian said. “It tells you people will respond to the movies out there, that they want to escape into a story.”

In “K-PAX,” Spacey plays a mental patient claiming to be a visitor from a distant planet who has a healing effect on other inmates and his psychiatrist (Bridges). Playing in 2,541 locations, the film had a solid average of $6,877 a theater and played to audiences largely 25 and older.

“I think the fact is, it’s the first real dramatic film for adults released in a very long time,” said Nikki Rocco, head of distribution for Universal, which produced “K-PAX.” “To have adults come out in such magnitude shows the marketing really worked. It’s not a film for teenagers.”

“13 Ghosts” stars F. Murray Abraham and Tony Shalhoub in a visual-effects driven remake of William Castle’s haunted-house tale from 1960. It averaged $5,627 in 2,781 theaters.

“Bones,” playing in just 845 theaters, had a so-so screen average of $3,483. “On the Line” averaged $2,556 in 900 theaters.

Advertisement