IMAX Corporation announced today that Eagle Eye: The IMAX Experience grossed approximately $1.6 million of the film's $29.1 million total - nearly six percent of the overall domestic box office - on just 84 IMAX screens, marking IMAX's largest September or October opening for a Hollywood release.
{sidebar id=1}The 84 IMAX(R) theatres included 14 new joint venture IMAX digital theatres. The 14 theatres performed well, delivering per screen averages that were above the overall IMAX network average. Opening weekend exit surveys conducted at the new joint venture IMAX digital locations indicated that moviegoers were impressed with Eagle Eye: The IMAX Experience and wished to return to IMAX theatres in the future, which is consistent with historical exit survey data from IMAX's film-based theatres. The surveys also indicated that 20 percent of audience members at the new IMAX digital locations had never been to an IMAX theatre previously.
"The strong performance of our new Read more...
{sidebar id=1}The 84 IMAX(R) theatres included 14 new joint venture IMAX digital theatres. The 14 theatres performed well, delivering per screen averages that were above the overall IMAX network average. Opening weekend exit surveys conducted at the new joint venture IMAX digital locations indicated that moviegoers were impressed with Eagle Eye: The IMAX Experience and wished to return to IMAX theatres in the future, which is consistent with historical exit survey data from IMAX's film-based theatres. The surveys also indicated that 20 percent of audience members at the new IMAX digital locations had never been to an IMAX theatre previously.
"The strong performance of our new Read more...
- 9/30/2008
- by IESB Staff <alyson@iesb.net>
- IESB.net
Welcome to yet another September edition of the Reject Report. Well, this certainly has been a month to forget at the cash registers, but things may change this weekend. A number of new movies are rolling out and at least three of them will be going wide right across North ...
- 9/26/2008
- by John Cairns
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
“You’ve been activated.” If you get a strange call from a strange person (most likely a female) telling you these three words, consider yourself no longer in control of your life. You are now her puppet and are forced to do as she says or you will face inconceivable consequences. Who is she? What does she want? Why me? These questions will be answered through the course of this incredible roller coaster ride of a movie. I thought the fun, action packed summertime movies were over. I guess not because this one can play up there with the big boys [...]...
- 9/26/2008
- by The Critic
- SmartCine.com
PLOT: Jerry Shaw is having a bad day. His landlord wants rent that he doesn.t have and he just found out his twin brother was killed. Soon, he finds his once empty bank account overflowing with cash, and his apartment packed with wall to wall fire arms. That is when his phone rings, and a strange woman warns him that the F.B.I. are about to bust in on him. Meanwhile, after Rachel Holloman sends her young son off with his school orchestra to play for the President in Washington D.C., she...
- 9/26/2008
- by JimmyO
- JoBlo.com
You can always check into our UPCOMING MOVIES section for all of the latest info on all the upcoming movie releases, but here's what's opening this week --> FILMS IN WIDE RELEASE EAGLE EYE Jerry Shaw (LaBeouf) and Rachel Holloman (Monaghan) are two strangers thrown together by a mysterious phone call from a woman they have never met. Threatening their lives and family, she pushes Jerry and Rachel into a series of increasingly dangerous situations . using the...
- 9/22/2008
- by Mike Sampson
- JoBlo.com
It almost feels as if today is destined to become the simple news day of the week -- so many stories, many of which are not conducive to me ranting and raving about something -- they are simply, just news. Alas, it is probably high time that I just spit ...
- 9/8/2008
- by Neil Miller
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
Lionsgate Films
Taking its cue from an old Latin American proverb that contends, "A thief who steals from a thief will receive 100 years of forgiveness," Ladron que roba a ladron is a heist comedy about a heartless crook who is taken down by two former associates.
But the scam doesn't end there.
It doesn't require an Eagle Eye to see this American-produced, Spanish-language production for what it really is -- an obvious "Ocean's Eleven" knockoff, minus any of that franchise's hip sensibility.
Populated by Latino telenovela stars in a Los Angeles setting, this limited Lionsgate release is facing the tricky challenge of coaxing money out of an audience accustomed to seeing these folks for free, not to mention the fact that moviegoing is traditionally way down on the list of Labor Day weekend activities. DVD definitely would be a better bet.
Directed by TV veteran Joe Menendez from an uninspired script by JoJo Henrickson, Ladron follows the exploits of not-quite-reformed thieves Emilio (Miguel Varoni) and Alejandro (Fernando Colunga), who reunite for one big heist.
The target is Moctezuma Valdez (Saul Lisazo), a ruthless TV infomercial pitchman who has made millions shilling worthless personal-improvement products -- from weight-loss creams to cancer-curing elixirs -- to poor Latino immigrants.
Out to prove there is honor among thieves, Emilio and Alejandro assemble a team of actual day laborers to infiltrate Valdez's estate while emptying his gigantic vault and redistributing the wealth.
While the caper attempts to ape the "Ocean's" style -- right down to the credit sequences and Lisazo's passing resemblance to George Clooney -- it proves to be a pale imitation when it comes to sparkling repartee and crisp pacing.
At least give Menendez and his producers credit for delivering an ensemble who look like they stepped right out of a telenovela (with pit stops at the gym and tanning salon) and onto those sunny L.A. sets, where the perpetually blue skies have been dutifully captured by cinematographer Adam Silver.
Taking its cue from an old Latin American proverb that contends, "A thief who steals from a thief will receive 100 years of forgiveness," Ladron que roba a ladron is a heist comedy about a heartless crook who is taken down by two former associates.
But the scam doesn't end there.
It doesn't require an Eagle Eye to see this American-produced, Spanish-language production for what it really is -- an obvious "Ocean's Eleven" knockoff, minus any of that franchise's hip sensibility.
Populated by Latino telenovela stars in a Los Angeles setting, this limited Lionsgate release is facing the tricky challenge of coaxing money out of an audience accustomed to seeing these folks for free, not to mention the fact that moviegoing is traditionally way down on the list of Labor Day weekend activities. DVD definitely would be a better bet.
Directed by TV veteran Joe Menendez from an uninspired script by JoJo Henrickson, Ladron follows the exploits of not-quite-reformed thieves Emilio (Miguel Varoni) and Alejandro (Fernando Colunga), who reunite for one big heist.
The target is Moctezuma Valdez (Saul Lisazo), a ruthless TV infomercial pitchman who has made millions shilling worthless personal-improvement products -- from weight-loss creams to cancer-curing elixirs -- to poor Latino immigrants.
Out to prove there is honor among thieves, Emilio and Alejandro assemble a team of actual day laborers to infiltrate Valdez's estate while emptying his gigantic vault and redistributing the wealth.
While the caper attempts to ape the "Ocean's" style -- right down to the credit sequences and Lisazo's passing resemblance to George Clooney -- it proves to be a pale imitation when it comes to sparkling repartee and crisp pacing.
At least give Menendez and his producers credit for delivering an ensemble who look like they stepped right out of a telenovela (with pit stops at the gym and tanning salon) and onto those sunny L.A. sets, where the perpetually blue skies have been dutifully captured by cinematographer Adam Silver.
- 8/29/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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