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Updated Feb 8, 2010 - 3:24 pm

`Dear John' delivers No. 1 debut with $30.5M

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LOS ANGELES (AP) - The romantic drama "Dear John" has knocked the sci-fi blockbuster "Avatar" off its No. 1 box-office perch.

"Dear John" debuted with $30.5 million, nudging "Avatar" to second-place with $22.9 million.

"Avatar," which had been No. 1 for seven weekends, raised its revenue records to $639.3 million domestically and $2.2 billion worldwide.

The top 20 movies at U.S. and Canadian theaters Friday through Sunday, followed by distribution studio, gross, number of theater locations, average receipts per location, total gross and number of weeks in release, as compiled Monday by Hollywood.com are:

1. "Dear John," Sony Screen Gems, $30,468,614, 2,969 locations, $10,262 average, $30,468,614, one week.

2. "Avatar," Fox, $22,850,881, 3,000 locations, $7,617 average, $629,344,204, eight weeks.

3. "From Paris With Love," Lionsgate, $8,158,860, 2,722 locations, $2,997 average, $8,158,860, one week.

4. "Edge of Darkness," Warner Bros., $6,855,371, 3,066 locations, $2,236 average, $28,947,851, two weeks.

5. "The Tooth Fairy," Fox, $6,629,595, 3,218 locations, $2,060 average, $34,462,568, three weeks.

6. "When in Rome," Disney, $5,549,129, 2,456 locations, $2,259 average, $20,944,734, two weeks.

7. "The Book of Eli," Warner Bros., $4,717,335, 2,820 locations, $1,673 average, $82,045,140, four weeks.

8. "Crazy Heart," Fox Searchlight , $3,567,671, 819 locations, $4,356 average, $11,105,401, eight weeks.

9. "Legion," Sony Screen Gems, $3,453,651, 2,339 locations, $1,477 average, $34,731,934, three weeks.

10. "Sherlock Holmes," Warner Bros., $2,535,174, 1,805 locations, $1,405 average, $201,484,470, seven weeks.

11. "The Blind Side," Warner Bros., $2,503,224, 1,740 locations, $1,439 average, $241,529,593, 12 weeks.

12. "Up in the Air," Paramount, $2,283,113, 1,547 locations, $1,476 average, $76,614,306, 10 weeks.

13. "The Lovely Bones," Paramount, $2,262,399, 2,330 locations, $971 average, $41,485,830, nine weeks.

14. "Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel," Fox, $2,125,922, 1,965 locations, $1,082 average, $212,156,137, seven weeks.

15. "It's Complicated," Universal, $2,080,395, 1,671 locations, $1,245 average, $107,534,385, seven weeks.

16. "The Spy Next Door," Lionsgate, $918,846, 1,007 locations, $912 average, $22,858,012, four weeks.

17. "An Education," Sony Pictures Classics, $763,234, 761 locations, $1,003 average, $9,622,621, 18 weeks.

18. "A Single Man," Weinstein Co., $627,124, 353 locations, $1,777 average, $6,178,651, nine weeks.

19. "Extraordinary Measures," CBS Films, $521,805, 1,153 locations, $453 average, $11,854,694, three weeks.

20. "Precious: Based on the Novel `Push' By Sapphire," Lionsgate, $474,156, 669 locations, $709 average, $46,057,209, 14 weeks.

___

On the Net:

http://www.hollywood.com/boxoffice

___

Universal Pictures and Focus Features are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of General Electric Co.; Sony Pictures, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount and Paramount Vantage are divisions of Viacom Inc.; Disney's parent is The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is a division of The Walt Disney Co.; 20th Century Fox, Fox Searchlight Pictures and Fox Atomic are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a consortium of Providence Equity Partners, Texas Pacific Group, Sony Corp., Comcast Corp., DLJ Merchant Banking Partners and Quadrangle Group; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC Films is owned by Rainbow Media Holdings, a subsidiary of Cablevision Systems Corp.; Rogue Pictures is owned by Relativity Media LLC; Overture Films is a subsidiary of Liberty Media Corp.


(Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

Comments (9)
  • Add A Comment

  • FungusCorners wrote...
    Fools and their money...
    Hollywood has done a pretty good job at separating otherwise smart people from their money with hogwash like this movie. I don't get it.
  • Loving Life wrote...
    AVATAR...
    ... is amazing. AVATAR, this puppy ROCKS!!! I got to tell you, I went in with a jaded eye, not sure if this movie was all it's cracked up to be. It was, and more. It was fantastic. I actually feel better about AVATAR, than I did with Star Wars. Side Note on Star Wars: I was stationed in the Philippines and had heard about the amazing special effects. When I finally saw it, the special effects weren't all that special. I had seen the same effects on a TV show four years earlier (Space 1999 with Martin Landau et al.) In AVATAR, the effects were just brilliant. The amazing detail, the other-worldly effects that make you feel at home, even the 3D was supreme. When you see this movie, this experience, you will find yourself getting all excited, and teary-eyed, over the characters. The Na'vi come across as being so real. So much so, you get to the point were you do forget that they are CGI. The mix of animation, live action, CGI, and the story were seamless. You really do get into the characters. I am absolutely going to see AVATAR in IMAX. FYI: Even the people in the very subdued Gig Harbor Galaxy Theater were cheering, jumping, and screaming. Oh, yeah, the Sci-Fi nerds have a whole new language to learn.
  • Dark Jedi wrote...
    Avatar
    I don't know if FungusCorners has seen Avatar. But for those who haven't, you have to see it in Imax 3D. It's absolutely visually impressive. Yes, the story has been told by other movies in the past, but still it is an impressive movie. Well worth your matinee movie money.
  • SinStarkiller wrote...
    Avatar
    Totally agree Avatar was awesome. 3-d sure has come a long way too. Excellent movie!
  • hpygolkyone wrote...
    FernGully Meets Terminator......
    I didn't see the movie in 3D, but it was okay. I thought my kids were going to lynch me for giving it MUCH LOWER marks than they had! After taking into account that I had discount coupons to see the movie, so that put the price at a more reasonable $6...I would say it was worth it.
  • Stevebo wrote...
    The 3-D experience is what makes the movie.
    The storyline isn't an original one (think Dances with Wolves in space), and the character development is ok... but it's the 3-D visuals and graphics that make the movie amazing.

    I'd suspect that FungusCorners hasn't even seen the movie - but I can concur what many other's are saying about the movie - and that is to say that the movie is completely worth seeing in theaters. I'd highly recommend seeing it in 3-D.

  • pro_steel_header wrote...
    i agree with funguscorners...
    the only reason this film has been ranked above all others in the money catagory is because ticket prices are through the roof!!! if everyone who had seen star wars when it opened had paid 8-10 dollars a pop, then it would be never be beat at the box office. they need to base a movies success on the attendance figures, not the monetary figures...
  • SeattleD wrote...
    I give this movie low marks but I see why other people liked it.
    The story line was utterly predictable with no surprises or twists. I watched one preview and guessed the guy was going to fall in love with an alien, then there would be a war with the humans and the guy would fight on the side of the aliens, and the aliens would win because the humans are evil. While the CGI was impressive it was visual overkill for my tastes. Did the grass really need to glow in the dark just because you stepped on it? It was also just so fairy-tale that I felt like I just watched a children's movie. Attach your hair communicator to a dragon and all of a sudden you're best friends. Talk about taking tree hugging, attach your hair communicator to a tree and your prayers are answered. Then have everyone attach their hair communicator to the ground and sing Kumbaya to work even more ridiculous miracles. Blech. District 9 was a far better movie.
  • wonderfullone wrote...
    correction...
    "But factoring in today's higher admission prices, "Star Wars" remains well ahead of "Avatar" on actual number of tickets sold." That's comforting, because as Kelso says. "It's only the best movie of all time!" Avatar will have it's five seconds of fame, but it's playing a tired and overplayed plot. Enjoy it you can.







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