Cast member Ashley Tisdale poses at the premiere of the movie 'High School Musical 3: Senior Year' at Galen Center in Los Angeles October 16, 2008. The movie opens in the U.S. on October 24. [Agencies] |
This weekend's boxoffice showdown between a Disney kids musical and an R-rated gorefest might seem like someone's idea of a sick joke, except for one simple fact: Both films likely will make out like bandits.
The musical is "High School Musical 3: Senior Year," the first big-screen adaptation of the Disney Channel's hit "High School Musical" franchise. And the blood-spattered horror film is Lionsgate's "Saw V," which bows exactly a year after "Saw IV" opened with $32 million in vivid proof that the franchise still had plenty of, uh, life left in it.
Both films aim for youthful moviegoers, but their target audiences couldn't be more different in what studio executives like to call their "psychographics." Together, their market impact amounts to a double-barreled blast of box office bang as the industry seeks to mark a fifth straight session of weekend-over-weekend upticks.
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"We have a very avid fan base, and it's pretty wide," Disney distribution president Chuck Viane said. "So anything is possible."
Kenny Ortega, director of the franchise's 2006 and 2007 TV movies, also helmed "HSM3."
Universal's film adaptation of the stage musical "Mamma Mia!" set a genre record in July with a first-weekend haul of $27.8 million en route to $120 million overall domestically. Miramax's "Chicago" remains the top domestic grosser following its $171 million theatrical run in 2002-03.
The latest "Saw" installment, starring Tobin Bell and Julie Benz, stands a good chance of matching its franchise predecessor's bow, and an opening of at least $25 million is considered a lock. Factors including World Series competition could prove telling, but executives aren't concerned that youth magnet "HSM3" will pull prospective moviegoers away from "Saw V."
"We're certainly not going to be compete against each other," Lionsgate distribution president Steve Rothenberg said. "The films should be complementary."
Warner Bros. has the frame's third wide opener -- "Pride and Glory," a New Line production starring Edward Norton and Colin Farrell. The police drama has been tracking softly in prerelease surveys, and its weekend tally could be limited to the single-digit millions.
Disney also will mount its annual rerelease of "Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas" in more than 280 3-D auditoriums. Many theater operators are building Halloween-themed parties around the release this weekend and next, Viane said.
Universal's Clint Eastwood-directed period drama "Changeling," starring Angelina Jolie, numbers among the session's limited bows. Notable expansions include Miramax's continued rollout of Mike Leigh's well-reviewed "Happy-Go-Lucky."