The
undead came alive once more over the weekend as "Resident Evil:
Apocalypse" debuted at No. 1 at the box office, bringing in $23.7
million.
The
sequel to 2002's "Resident Evil," based on a video game
series about shooting apart shuffling, bio-poisoned zombie attackers,
follows hits like last year's remake of "Dawn of the Dead"
and the zombie art-house thriller "28 Days Later," which
reinvigorated the genre.
Overall,
however, it was a slow week for new releases as most kids headed back
to school and the big-budget blockbusters of summer evaporated in
favor of B-movie-style thrillers and monster movies.
The
suspense drama "Cellular," with Kim Basinger as a kidnapping
victim who makes a random phone call to a cell phone and pleads with
a stranger to find her, opened at No. 2 with $10.6 million.
"'Cellular'
did OK, but every other movie was just treading water behind 'Resident
Evil,'" said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box office tracker
Exhibitor Relations Co.
"Resident
Evil: Apocalypse" stars Milla Jovovich as Alice, a bath-towel
wearing, butt-kicking security chief who tries to help a group of
survivors escape a zombified metropolis before the city of ghouls
is annihilated by a nuclear strike.
With
its miniskirted heroines and gooey guts-a-plenty, "Apocalypse"
appealed mainly to guys under the age of 25.
"Certainly
this is an adaptation from a game, so it has its own audience,"
said Rory Bruer, distribution chief for Sony, which released the film.
"The zombies aspect of it is just fun."
Bruer
also credited the marketing campaign, which featured early teaser
trailers that had little to do with the action-horror theme. One trailer
appeared to be an ad for a genetically engineered moisturizing lotion
that promises to regenerate dead skin cells - the product that causes
the mayhem in the films.
"These
movies come out of nowhere and do big business and everybody is caught
off guard, but we really shouldn't be," said Dergarabedian. "These
horror thrillers always make a killing at the box office. ... They're
not trying to woo the critics with this move. It's about commerce."
The
rest of the top 10 were holdovers from previous weeks. "Napoleon
Dynamite," a weird little independent comedy about a weird little
guy and his friends, was notable for hanging in at No. 9 after 14
weeks in theaters. Most movies drop out after about three weeks.
The
top 12 movies grossed $64.7 million, about 11 percent lower than the
same weekend last year, when "Once Upon a Time in Mexico"
led the box office.
Estimated
ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at North American theaters,
according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures will be released
Monday.
1.
"Resident Evil: Apocalypse," $23.7 million.
2.
"Cellular," $10.6 million.
3.
"Without a Paddle," $4.6 million.
4.
"Hero," $4.4 million.
5.
"Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement," $2.93 million.
6.
"Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid," $2.90 million.
7.
"Vanity Fair," $2.74 million.
8.
"Collateral," $2.70 million.
9.
"Napoleon Dynamite," $2.65 million.
10.
"Paparazzi," $2.60 million.