Tag: noah
‘Noah’ Stays Dry To Top U.S. Cinema Box Office

‘Noah’ Stays Dry To Top U.S. Cinema Box Office

Los Angeles (AFP) – “Noah,” the big screen adaptation of the biblical tale starring Russell Crowe in the lead role, topped the North American Box Office at the weekend, estimates showed Sunday.

The action drama, which reunites Crow with Jennifer Connelly whom he starred alongside in “A Beautiful Mind” in 2001, earned $44 million, easily holding off last week’s top earner “Divergent,” which took second spot with $26.5 million.

“Muppets Most Wanted,” Kermit and Co’s latest outing, was a distant third with $11.4 million in takings. It was ahead of “Mr Peabody and Sherman,” based on characters from the 1960s television cartoon “Rocky and Bullwinkle,” which earned $9.5 million in its third weekend in theaters.

In fifth place ($9.1 million) was the religiously themed “God’s Not Dead,” which tells the story of a college freshman who debates his atheist philosophy professor.

The film was ahead of Wes Anderson’s quirky “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” which earned $8.8 million in sixth spot.

In a quiet week for new releases, the only other debut movie, “Sabotage,” an action flick headed by Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sam Worthington, took a disappointing seventh place with $5.3 million in ticket sales.

The rest of the pack included car-chase action movie “Need for Speed,” which fell from sixth to eighth spot earning $4.3 million, followed by ancient Greece fantasy-action movie “300: Rise of an Empire” — the gory prequel to the 2007 hit “300” — which took $4.3 million in sales.

Rounding out the top 10 with $4.1 million was “Non-Stop,” Liam Neeson’s latest action effort, as an air marshal faced with a ransom demand on a long-haul flight.

AFP Photo/Jemal Countess

‘Noah’ Expected To Sail To Number One At The Box Office

‘Noah’ Expected To Sail To Number One At The Box Office

By Ryan Faughnder, Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — An Old Testament epic will storm theaters this weekend with hopes of attracting a boatload of moviegoers.

Director Darren Aronofsky’s $130 million-budgeted “Noah” is expected to generate around $40 million in ticket sales in the U.S. and Canada through Sunday, according to people who have seen pre-release audience surveys. Paramount Pictures, which is releasing the film, has predicted a softer gross of $30 million to $33 million.

An opening in the projected range for the special effects-heavy, big-budget disaster film — starring Russell Crowe as the biblical boat-builder — will almost certainly make it the No. 1 movie at the domestic box office. If “Noah” is a hit, it will be the latest in a string of religion-inspired successes.

“Son of God,” a less-expensive New Testament retelling culled from Mark Burnett and Roma Downey’s “Bible” miniseries, opened this year with $25.6 million in revenue, propped up by bulk purchases from Christian groups, and has since gone on to gross $56 million. The modern-day campus drama “God’s Not Dead” opened last weekend with a surprisingly strong $9.2 million from just 780 theaters.

Aronofsky’s dark take on the Book of Genesis story of Noah’s ark, financed by Paramount and Regency Enterprises, marks a departure for a director best known for lower-budget fare such as “Black Swan,” “The Wrestler” and “Requiem for a Dream.”

The PG-13-rated film has faced criticism from the outset, both from religious groups that questioned how faithfully it would treat its source material along with conservatives who decried its emphasis on environmental themes. Reviews by film critics have been generally positive, according to Rotten Tomatoes.

The Scripture-sourced slate won’t end with “Noah.” Upcoming God-themed movies include “Heaven Is For Real,” “Exodus,” “Last Days in the Desert” and “Mary,” all coming at least a decade after the massive success of Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ.”

“Noah” began its maiden voyage in Mexico and South Korea a week ago with a strong $14 million, and it’s likely to play well overseas. Alongside Crowe, the disaster picture’s stars include Anthony Hopkins, Jennifer Connelly and Emma Watson.

Last week’s chart-topper “Divergent,” the teen dystopian adventure starring Shailene Woodley, should continue to pull in plenty of box-office cash. Lionsgate is hoping the Summit Entertainment film will kick off another strong young-adult franchise after the massive success of the “Hunger Games” series. Its second weekend could add around $25 million to its domestic total of more than $60 million.

In “Noah’s” wake, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s new crime thriller “Sabotage” is not likely to see much action at the multiplex. The movie about a DEA team whose elite agents are targeted by a ruthless drug cartel, is expected to take in less than $10 million in its debut. The $35 million picture was financed and produced by QED International and is getting its U.S. release from Open Road Films.

Wes Anderson’s “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” expanding to 970 theaters, should continue to impress with a weekend tally of around $10 million. The quirky director’s latest, distributed domestically by Fox Searchlight Pictures, has amassed more than $14 million in its limited run.

The new “Cesar Chavez” biopic could bring in around $5 million from 660 locations. Michael Pena plays the civil rights activist and labor organizer in the film directed by Diego Luna and produced by Pantelion Films, a joint venture between Lionsgate and the giant Mexican media company Grupo Televisa.

“Bad Words,” an R-rated comedy written and directed by “Arrested Development” star Jason Bateman, is expanding to around 600 theaters and could gross $5 million or less.

Photo: Edinburgh International Film Festival via Flickr

Russell Crowe Slates Rio’s Traffic Chaos

Russell Crowe Slates Rio’s Traffic Chaos

Rio de Janeiro (AFP) – Ten weeks before the city expects to welcome throngs of World Cup fans, Hollywood star Russell Crowe slated Rio’s chaotic traffic during a visit to promote biblical epic Noah.

Although happy to visit Brazil, Crowe admitted he found the traffic a challenge — not least as he braved the cars for a bicycle ride around the metropolis.

“What I found was chaos,” he told Broadcaster Globo’s Fantastico program in an interview broadcast Sunday, adding that coming out of the airport the surrounding area was none too scenic.

“The bit I came in, to be honest … needed a bit of cleaning up,” he reflected in a pre-recorded interview.

Rio is straining to revamp its image as the World Cup and the Rio 2016 Olympics approach, but is struggling with the mammoth task of reversing decades of urban decline.

During his stay — Sunday’s program was broadcast after Crowe left Brazil for the United States — the actor had tweeted his incredulity at the urban mayhem that Rio residents know so well.

“Bike ride in Rio. 16.5 km of chaos. Jumped in car to go to Christ the Redeemer, absolute bun fight. Ran out of time,” Crowe said.

He added that “Rio takes the prize” for slowness after enduring a frustrating two-and-a-half hour trip back to the airport.

Crowe was on his third promotional stop to promote the film.

The movie has been blocked by censors in three Middle Eastern states — Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates.

He said the reaction in those countries had been expected “given that it is a tenet of the Muslim religion that you can’t make stories or render images about the Prophet.”

AFP Photo/Andrew Cowie

Darren Aronofsky’s ‘Noah’ Launches Into A Storm

Darren Aronofsky’s ‘Noah’ Launches Into A Storm

By John Horn, Los Angeles Times

MEXICO CITY — A lot of people think they know what the real story of the movie “Noah” should be.

They are likely some of the same people who think they know what the real story of the man Noah is.

Darren Aronofsky, the director of the new movie about the man and the great flood, is ready to rain on what he believes is their misinformed parade.

“Noah has been turned into a nursery school story,” said the director and co-writer of “Noah,” which had its world premiere in Mexico City on Monday night. “And it’s not a nursery school story in the Bible. It’s the end of the world.”

Rarely in recent years has a movie generated as much polarizing opinion before its release as “Noah,” a $130-million drama set to arrive in U.S. theaters on March 28. The film stars Russell Crowe as the man who builds a giant ark as God wipes a sinful mankind from the planet; Jennifer Connelly plays his wife, Naameh, with Anthony Hopkins as his grandfather, Methuselah.

The movie is the target of a fatwa from a leading Egyptian Sunni Muslim institution because Noah is mentioned in the Koran and therefore not suitable for artistic depiction. Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates have banned the film, with other Middle Eastern countries expected to follow. Closer to home, where in theory there is more religious tolerance, “Noah” has already been attacked by the Christian right for its creative license.

Paramount Pictures, which co-financed “Noah” with New Regency and is distributing the film, believes much of the censure has come from people who haven’t seen the film and were responding to secondhand accounts of an outdated screenplay.

One conservative Christian organization, the National Religious Broadcasters, threatened to boycott the film unless Paramount put out a marketing disclaimer. Without telling Aronofsky, the studio decided to modify advertising materials by saying the movie was “inspired by” the story of Noah rather than be seen as literal scripture.

At the center of the storm stands a weary Aronofsky, whose strongly personal films include “Black Swan” and “The Wrestler” and who is a veteran of tough battles with studios and executives over the years.

The 45-year-old filmmaker has been thinking a lot about Noah ever since he wrote a prize-winning poem about the Bible story called “The Dove” when he was 13.

He and screenwriter Ari Handel have been working on the “Noah” script for a decade, burying themselves in research — “I read everything,” said Aronofsky, who can pass for an armchair religious scholar — and consulting with an array of Jewish and Christian theologians.

Now that the 2-hour-17-minute film has been screened, the result of their investigations is obvious: “Noah” is one of the most overtly spiritual movies any big Hollywood studio has made in years (both the current “Son of God” and Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ” in 2004 were independently produced).

“The creator made Adam in His image, then placed the world in his care,” is one of the very first lines of dialogue in the film.

And even if Crowe has the lead role, the real star of the movie is the concept of original sin.

Audiences seem intrigued by the premise. Two weeks ahead of the film’s domestic debut, moviegoers’ interest is strong.

The forthcoming debate around the film will likely focus on how the filmmaker has expanded the Noah story into a full-length film. As Aronofsky points out, the Genesis tale of Noah, for all of its enduring power, is fleeting in the Bible, and Noah doesn’t speak until a dove returns with an olive branch. That doesn’t make for much of a movie.

“When you really look at the story in the Bible, there’s very, very little information,” Aronofsky said. “It’s four chapters long. No one speaks until the end. And the Noah character doesn’t really have an arc — with a ‘c.’ But the more you read it, the more interesting clues there are. There are many, many hints at things.”

Photo: Edinburgh International Film Festival via Flickr