In this file film publicity image released by Disney,
Helena Bonham Carter is shown in a scene from the film,
"Alice in Wonderland."
Alice is still ruling the movie palace.
Johnny Depp and Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland
easily remained the No. 1 weekend draw with $62 million,
according to studio estimates on Sunday. The Disney fantasy
has climbed to a $208.6 million total domestically, becoming
the first $200 million hit released this year.
In its second weekend in theaters, Alice in
Wonderland pulled ahead of the $206.5 million domestic
haul of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory to become
the top-grossing of Depp and Burton's seven films together,
which include Edward Scissorhands, Sweeney
Todd and Corpse Bride.
"I believe it's literally the magical, if you would, pairing
of Tim and Johnny," said Chuck Viane, head of distribution
for Disney. "When you take those two, they always seem to
make something really out of the ordinary."
Alice in Wonderland added $76 million overseas to
bring its international total to $221 million and its
worldwide gross to $430 million.
A rush of new movies had so-so openings, led by Matt Damon's
Iraq War thriller Green Zone, which debuted at No. 2
with $14.5 million domestically. Released by Universal,
Green Zone stars Damon as the leader of a U.S. Army
team who stumbles onto a conspiracy over the search for
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
Paramount's romantic comedy She's Out of My League
debuted at No. 3 with $9.6 million. The movie stars Jay
Baruchel as a geek in an unlikely romance with a babe.
Twilight star Robert Pattinson's romantic drama
Remember Me opened at No. 4 with $8.3 million. The
Summit Entertainment release stars Pattinson and
Lost co-star Emilie de Ravin in a dark story of
young lovers with tragedy in their past.
In its fourth weekend, Paramount's Shutter Island,
the latest collaboration between Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin
Scorsese, was No. 5 with $8.1 million, raising its domestic
total to $108 million.
Debuting at No. 6 with $7.6 million was Fox Searchlight's
comedy Our Family Wedding, starring America Ferrera
as a Hispanic bride marrying a black man.
Alice in Wonderland took in nearly as much as the
rest of the top-10 movies combined.
"It's like this great divide between the No. 1 and 2 films,
which says that without Alice in Wonderland in the
marketplace, we'd be hurting right now," said Paul
Dergarabedian, box-office analyst for Hollywood.com. "By
itself, it's really propelling huge box office."
Hollywood's business soared, with overall revenues at $144
million, up 43% from the same weekend last year, when
Race to Witch Mountain led with a $24.4 million
debut.
For the year, revenues are at $2.24 billion, up 9% compared
to receipts last year, when Hollywood took in a record $10.6
billion.
Factoring in higher admission prices, movie attendance this
year is running 6.7% ahead of 2009's, according to
Hollywood.com. Before Alice in Wonderland opened,
attendance was lagging slightly behind last year's.
"In just a couple of weeks, 'Alice' has turned the entire
marketplace around almost single-handedly," Dergarabedian
said.
James Cameron's science-fiction sensation remained a strong
draw after nearly three months in theaters, taking in $6.6
million to raise its domestic total to $730.3 million. The
20th Century Fox release has topped $2.6 billion worldwide.
Summit Entertainment's The Hurt Locker, which beat
Avatar for best picture at the Academy Awards, got a
slight box-office bump from its Oscar triumph. The Iraq War
drama, which is out on DVD but came back to theaters for
Oscar season, pulled in $828,000, raising its box-office
total to $15.7 million.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and
Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final figures
will be released Monday.
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