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‘Spider-Man’ Already Showing Amazing Legs

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Now you know why they call him the Amazing Spider-Man.

With $72 million in its second weekend--a number that would be a tremendous debut weekend for almost any film--”Spider-Man” knocked off “Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace” to become the fastest movie ever to hit $200 million.

“Spider-Man” passed that mark on Saturday, its ninth day of release. It took “The Phantom Menace” 13 days to reach $200 million.

The comic book adaptation starring Tobey Maguire and directed by Sam Raimi has grossed $223.6 million in 10 days, according to studio estimates Sunday.

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The movie had the best second weekend ever, beating the $57.5 million that “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” took in its second weekend.

“This is one of those second weekends that’s almost more impressive than the first, if that’s possible,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of the box office tracking firm Exhibitor Relations.

After huge openings, films often nosedive by 50% or more in their second weekend because so many people already have seen them. “Spider-Man” held up strongly despite its phenomenal premiere, its revenue dipping just 37%.

“That’s probably the most gravity-defying feat yet of ‘Spider-Man,’ to hold up like that from a number of that size,” said Jeff Blake, head of distribution and marketing at Sony, which released the film.

Opening in second place was the Richard Gere-Diane Lane adultery thriller “Unfaithful,” directed by Adrian Lyne (“Fatal Attraction,” “Indecent Proposal”). “Unfaithful” grossed a healthy $14.2 million in 2,613 theaters. Distributor 20th Century Fox hopes good word of mouth will establish “Unfaithful” as an adult alternative to “Spider-Man” and its own new “Star Wars” movie that opens Thursday.

Older adults “don’t rush out to movies like you do for ‘Spider-Man’ or ‘Star Wars,’” said Rick Myerson, general sales manager for Fox. “What you’re hoping for with a film like this is a consistency where you continue to play week after week after week.”

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The teen comedy “The New Guy,” about a nerd who gets a make-over into a super-cool heartthrob at his new school, debuted at No. 3 with $9.5 million. “The Scorpion King” held at No. 4 with $4.4 million; No. 5 was “Changing Lanes” with $3.5 million.

In a little more than a week, “Spider-Man” soared past “Ice Age” to become the year’s top-grossing film. “Ice Age” has taken in $170.8 million in two months.

With broad demographic appeal and steady repeat business, “Spider-Man” is expected to hold well next weekend, though it comes up against “Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones.”

“Star Wars” creator George Lucas already has conceded his film will not break opening-weekend box office records because it is debuting on about 6,000 theater screens, 1,500 fewer than “Spider-Man.”

Lucas sought the highest-quality theaters, with digital sound, for his new “Star Wars” movie, forgoing a shot at a record opening and aiming for longevity.

“I’m not interested in opening weekends,” Lucas said in an interview last week. “I’m not interested in setting records. I know that sounds silly because we’ve broken so many records and done all that stuff.

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“I’m interested in making movies and telling stories and giving audiences the best possible presentation.”

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