Lost
World took in $72.1 million in its first three days over the 1997 Memorial
Day weekend. If the box-office estimate holds when final numbers are reported
Monday, Harry Potter will have surpassed the $90.1 million Lost World
grossed in its first four days. On Friday, Harry Potter broke the record
for best single-day take with $31.6 million, topping the previous best of $28.5
million by Phantom Menace in its opening day in 1999. On
Saturday, Harry Potter broke its own record by taking in $32.9 million.
And distributor Warner Bros. estimated the movie's Sunday ticket sales at $29
million, which would give the film the No. 3 best one-day gross. "We
obviously knew going in we were going to have a great opening," said Dan Fellman,
Warner's head of distribution. "Nobody anticipated such a staggering number that
would shatter every industry record." Based on the first
book of British author J.K. Rowling's adventure series about a school for wizards
and witches, Harry Potter was directed by Chris Columbus and stars Daniel
Radcliffe in the title role. They have little time to
bask in the film's success. Production on Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
begins Monday in London, with Warner planning to have it in theaters the weekend
before Thanksgiving next year. The studio hopes to do the same with the third
Harry Potter movie in 2003. Monsters, Inc.,
the No. 1 film for the previous two weekends, fell to second place with $23 million.
Disney's decision to put the animated tale into theaters two weeks before Harry
Potter has paid off: Monsters, Inc. set a record for best debut for
an animated movie and had taken in $156.7 million in just 17 days. The
top 12 movies grossed $157.1 million, up 6.6% from the same weekend a year ago
when four movies opened in wide release, including the blockbuster Dr. Seuss'
How the Grinch Stole Christmas. The two-and-a-half-hour
running time of Harry Potter limits the number of screenings that theaters
can squeeze in each day. Warner compensated by debuting the film in a record 3,672
theaters, which showed it on about 8,200 screens nearly one-fourth of the
nation's total. Harry Potter averaged $25,467
a theater. Monsters averaged $19,332 in 3,237 theaters in its debut. "I
think in the wake of Sept. 11, people are looking for entertainment close to home,"
said Paul Dergarabedian, president of Exhibitor Relations, which tracks the box
office. "Harry Potter plays right into that. It's a fantasy world people
can get out of the house and enjoy for a few hours, but stay relatively close
to home." Copyright 2001
The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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