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Thursday, 08 January 2009

Americans turn back on Baz's Australia

1/12/2008 7:42:42 AM.  | 

Aussies flocked to see Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman in Baz Luhrmann's epic Australia at the weekend, making it the number one film in the country.

Australia grossed $6.37 million at the box office on its opening weekend (Thursday to Sunday), bumping the latest James Bond movie Quantum of Solace to second place with $4.22 million.

Including its opening day and preview ticket sales, Australia has notched up $7.78 million to date, figures from Nielsen EDI show.

It is the most successful local film of 2008, easily beating the $2.3 million The Black Balloon pulled in during its entire cinema release.

But it failed to reach the $11.8 million benchmark set by Quantum of Solace in its first five days.

While Australians appear to have embraced the outback romance, the film failed to ignite much interest over a busy Thanksgiving long weekend in US and Canadian theatres.

Australia managed to scrape into fifth place at the North American box office, with $US20 million ($A30.4 million) in earnings.

Audiences instead filled cinemas showing the Reese Witherspoon-Vince Vaughn comedy, Four Holidays, which took $US46.7 million ($A71 million) from Wednesday to Sunday, easily claiming first place.

Four Holidays, with Witherspoon and Vaughn playing a yuppie couple forced to spend Christmas with their four divorced parents, opens in Australian theatres on Thursday.

The uninspiring US opening for Australia will likely damage the Oscar prospects for Kidman, Jackman and director-producer-screenwriter Luhrmann.

It has also left industry analysts wondering if the Hollywood studio backing the film, Rupert Murdoch's Twentieth Century Fox, will make money on its huge, four-year investment.

The studio will be hoping the film performs strongly in Europe and Asia.

The epic opens in most European countries on Christmas Day, and in Japan in February.

"Given the cost of the massive production - the studio kicked in $US78 million ($A118.6 million) of the $US130 million ($A197.6 million) budget - the Baz Luhrmann-directed film will need strong legs and spectacular international grosses in order to break even," Hollywood box office analyst Gitesh Pandya, of boxofficeguru.com, wrote in his weekly report.

COMMENTS

Monday, 01 December 2008

I hope other countries embrace **AUSTRALIA** . I saw it on the day of release here & I ABSOOLUTELY LOVED IT . I will be going to see it again on Wednesday . You laugh & you cry I thought it was wonderful Maybe Americans wouldn't get our humour ??

Posted by: Dee Elliott, Forster

 

Monday, 01 December 2008

Well Gee Dee. Go see it a few million more times. it wont be such a flop then.

Posted by: Nick Again, Maryborough

 

Monday, 01 December 2008

Kidman looks as if a ventriloquist has his hand up her back, pulling strings to make her mouth open and close. Her lack of interest in her two adopted children, choosing to live as far away from them as possible, and her self obsession with her looks, combine to make a woman who doesn't seem able to think, feel, act or emote any better than an aging stick insect. I loved the performances of Wenham, Bryan Brown, Jackman and all the rest of the cast but Kidman's performance was wooden.

Posted by: felicity goddard, hobart

 

Monday, 01 December 2008

Nicole Kidman a ventriloquist's dummy? You've got her confused with her sister, Antonia. She ALWAYS looks like that.

Posted by: Tim Williams, Penrith

 

Monday, 01 December 2008

Three times I have commented on this and three times my comments have been ignored. It is an abysmal movie with a central theme that Australia is racist which it isn't. It makes claims about stolen generations which are not true. As fantasies go, this is long and boring.

Posted by: Happy Fun Ball, Carramar/Sydney

Monday, 01 December 2008

Once .... Twice .....Three times an Oddball .How many times have i called you to and explain your comments ?. Well now you know how it feels like to be ignored .

Posted by: S lick, WA

Monday, 01 December 2008

wot HFB? pls rite agin

Posted by: works 4me, aust goodmovie

Monday, 01 December 2008

I don't ignore you S Lick. It is rare for me to return to a story I comment on.

Posted by: Happy Fun Ball, Carramar/Sydney

 

Monday, 01 December 2008

Can someone tell me why on earth Baz L called the movie Austria I mean Australia. Just what was he thinking. There is no title more calculated to deter Americans and Europeans from watching it. Did they toss a coin for the name or was someone asleep at the time. Can you imagine if Hoges had called his movie "Northern Territory" instead of the iconic "Crocodile Dundee" Also Hoges cast an American actress to get the US market. Baz the title is as crucial as the story & the cast. how disappointing

Posted by: Denlo B, Wollongong

 
 

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