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I saw STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI again this week and loved it just as much as the first time. Haters gonna hate.

’Star Wars’ loses out to ’Jumanji,’ ’Insidious’ in its fourth weekend at box office

LOS ANGELES — Move over, “Star Wars,” there are some new box office champs this weekend. “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” has topped the charts after three weekends in theatres, and newcomer “Insidious: The Last Key” opened in second, pushing “The Last Jedi” into third place.

Columbia Pictures says Sunday that the Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart-led “Jumanji” is estimated to have earned an additional $36 million this weekend, bringing its total to $244.4 million.

“This is all about ‘Jumanji’s’ staying power,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for box office tracker comScore. “This is a movie that was overshadowed by all the excitement around ‘The Last Jedi,’ and yet ‘Jumanji’ just kept plugging away and drawing audiences throughout the holiday … This is kind of unheard of for a movie this size.”

In second place is the horror film “Insidious: The Last Key,” the fourth in the franchise, which earned $29.3 million. The Universal and Blumhouse Pictures film even outperformed the third chapter in the series. That film launched to $22.7 million in June of 2015.

“We could not be more thrilled with that debut. It’s a fantastic result,” said Jim Orr, Universal’s president of domestic distribution. “The release date worked in our favour. There hasn’t been a similar film in a couple of months. ”

Young audiences drove the “Insidious” box office with 59% under the age of 25. Whether or not they enjoyed the film is another question: It got a scary B- CinemaScore.

“Star Wars: The Last Jedi” fell to third place with $23.6 million in its fourth weekend in theatres. The space blockbuster has grossed $572.5 million to date.

“The Greatest Showman” took fourth place with $13.8 million and “Pitch Perfect 3” rounded out the top five with $10.2 million.

Awards seasons films continue to expand throughout January, too, like Aaron Sorkin’s directorial debut “Molly’s Game,” which added over 1,300 theatres this weekend and took in $7 million. The Jessica Chastain-starrer about the real life “poker princess” Molly Bloom is up for two Golden Globe awards Sunday evening — best actress and best screenplay.

The Winston Churchill film “Darkest Hour” starring Gary Oldman (who is up for a best actor Golden Globe) also added 790 theatres and took in $6.4 million.

The weekend is up around 18% from the same weekend last year, which Dergarabedian sees as a sign that perhaps the 2018 box office will be stronger and more steady than 2017.

“2017 was not consistent. It was volatile, it was a rollercoaster,” Dergarabedian said. “This sets the tone for what we’re hoping is a consistent and strong 2018 box office.”

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to comScore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1.”Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle,” $36 million.

2.”Insidious: The Last Key,” $29.3 million.

3.”Star Wars: The Last Jedi,” $23.6 million.

4.”The Greatest Showman,” $13.8 million.

5.”Pitch Perfect 3,” $10.2 million.

6.”Ferdinand,” $7.7 million.

7.”Molly’s Game,” $7 million.

8.”Darkest Hour,” $6.4 million.

9.”Coco,” $5.5 million.

10.”All the Money in the World,” $3.6 million.

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I hope to see some new releases, and maybe STAR WARS again this week. It was a busy December.

Box Office: ‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi’ Holds Off ‘Jumanji’ on New Year’s Weekend

In a battle of box office heavyweights, Luke Skywalker just managed to hold off Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson as the world rang in another year.

Disney and LucasFilm’s “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” retained first place for the four-day New Year’s holiday weekend despite steep competition from Sony’s “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.” “Last Jedi” picked up an estimated $68.4 million, bringing its domestic haul to $533.1 million.

Don’t weep for “Jumanji,” however. The fantasy reboot, which finds Johnson, Jack Black, and Kevin Hart transported into a video game world, has outperformed expectations, picking up a lordly $66.5 million over the holiday weekend. It now has a hefty $185.7 million domestic gross and should continue to draw crowds in 2018. The “Jumanji” sequel has also done well internationally, racking up $350 million worldwide, and has provided a much-needed hit for a studio that has struggled to keep pace with the Disney’s and Warner Bros.’s of the world. It also scored with “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” a reboot of its wall-crawler franchise, and “Baby Driver,” but failed to turn “The Dark Tower” into a viable movie property.

Sony claims that “Jumanji” has a $90 million budget. Those veracity of those alleged production costs have raised eyebrows around town given the film’s Hawaii location and starry cast, but regardless of creative accounting and aggressive spinning, the result is impressive. A sequel seems preordained.

“Star Wars: The Last Jedi” closed 2017 as the year’s highest-grossing release and the seventh highest-grossing domestic movie of all time with $517.1 million. It will bypass its fellow franchisee “Rogue One” at some point on New Year’s Day to take the seventh spot on the stateside charts and has already blown past the $1 billion mark globally. The film carries a $200 million price tag, and has generated controversy for a series of creative decisions by director and writer Rian Johnson that have, depending on your perspective, either infused new energy into decades-old series or deviated dangerously from the Jedi canon.

It’s been a dismal year for the domestic box office, which ends 2017 with $11.12 billion in sales, down 2.3% from last year’s $11.38 billion and off slightly from 2015’s $11.14 billion, according to comScore. After a bruising summer, when revenues plummeted more than 6% in the wake of costly flops such as “The Mummy” and “Transformer: The Last Knight,” the gap did narrow. Fall and winter hits such as “It,” “Thor: Ragnarok,” “Coco,” and “Murder on the Orient Express,” helped make up the difference. The industry was also aided by record ticket prices. Empirically, fewer people made it to the multiplexes. Attendance is expected to hit a 27-year low when official numbers are tallied.

Universal’s “Pitch Perfect 3” took third place on the stateside charts, grossing $22.7 million for the four-day period and pushing its domestic total to just under $70 million. The a Cappella comedy carries a $45 million production budget and has been billed as the final installment in the franchise.

Hugh Jackman’s musical drama “The Greatest Showman” is finishing a close fourth with $20.7 million. The Fox-Chernin Entertainment production chronicles the rise of circus impresario P.T. Barnum. It got a boost from the holidays, and showed the biggest gain in the top 10 movies from the Christmas Eve weekend with an impressive 73% surge. The domestic total should hit $54.3 million through Monday. It’s a pricey movie, though. All that singing and dancing didn’t come cheap and “The Greatest Showman” cost $84 million to make.

Fox’s second weekend of “Ferdinand” rounded out the top five with $14.6 million, giving the animated comedy $56.8 million domestically.

Not every film was feeling the holiday spirit. Paramount’s “Downsizing” is a costly bomb. The comedy about a man (Matt Damon) who shrinks to the size of thimble in order to live in a materialistic utopia collapsed at the box office, eking out $6.1 million over the long weekend. Its total stands at $18.5 million — a paltry result given its $65 million budget. It also prolongs a box office losing streak for Damon. The actor also struck out with “Suburbicon” and “The Great Wall,” both of which opened during and flopped in 2017.

Warner Bros. and Alcon’s comedy “Father Figures” was another casualty of the Christmas crunch. The story of two twin brothers (Ed Helms and Owen Wilson) on a quest to find their biological father netted $5.1 million over the four-day weekend. Its total tops out at $14.1 million, making it unlikely that it will recoup its $25 million production budget as well its marketing costs.

And Sony’s “All the Money in the World” struggled to appeal to older audiences. The drama about the kidnapping of John Paul Getty III attracted lots of attention for the filmmakers’ last minute decision to re-cast a key role played by disgraced actor Kevin Spacey. The breakneck reshoots took place in a matter of weeks, with Christopher Plummer assuming the Spacey part as parsimonious billionaire J. Paul Getty, and added $10 million to the film’s $40 million budget. Alas, audiences failed to show up. The movie grossed $7.5 million over the holiday weekend, bringing its domestic total to $14.7 million.

Foreign audiences picked up the slack as domestic attendance sputtered in 2017. The global box office is projected to hit $40 billion for the first time in history, propelled by the return of China. Total ticket sales in the Middle Kingdom grew by 22.3%, ending the year with $8.6 billion in revenues. That, at least, gives a beleaguered movie business some cause for celebration.

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No thanks. Even though it’s only a dollar, I’ll take my chances.

Cineplex tests $1 reserved seating fee at some Star Wars screenings

Cineplex Inc. is giving Star Wars fans a surprise twist at the box office by charging an extra dollar for assigned seating at some showings.

The country’s biggest exhibitor has tacked on a surcharge at select regular screenings of Star Wars: The Last Jedi across Canada in hopes moviegoers will be willing to pay more for not waiting in line.

It’s a move the company says makes it convenient when a screening is sold out, which often leaves latecomers hunting for empty seats.

While reserved seating isn’t entirely new at Cineplex, the cost has usually been built into ticket prices for the company’s premium Imax, VIP and UltraAVX theatres. The exhibitor also experimented with charging an extra $2 for “prime seats” at the centre of a few of its busier theatres.

But it has not previously rolled out the concept at what it calls “regular” screenings — movies shown in traditional auditoriums without the additional costs associated with 3D or a larger screen.

With Star Wars: The Last Jedi likely to be the biggest film of the year, Cineplex wanted to gauge how audiences reacted to the concept on a wider scale. The company says about 20 per cent of its Canadian locations are testing the $1 fee for reserved seats at regular screenings.

If the concept is received positively, it’s likely Cineplex will revisit the reserved seating at regular screenings for other event movies expected to draw huge crowds.

The move comes as Cineplex and other theatre owners hunt for ways to boost profits at a time when a night at the movies competes with a raft of other convenient entertainment alternatives, like Netflix.

Screenings of Star Wars: The Last Jedi have put an extra financial squeeze on North American exhibitors after Disney revealed a number of unusual requirements for any theatre wanting to screen the film.

Disney told exhibitors it would pocket about 65 per cent of the box-office revenues from Star Wars tickets. Traditionally, distributors take about half of the box-office revenue for a movie.

The Wall Street Journal reported last month that Disney’s move cuts deeply into exhibitor profits for the biggest movie of the holiday season.

It was widely expected that theatre owners would look to recoup their lost share in other places, like hiking the price of concession items and boosting ticket prices wherever possible.

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I have been so patiently waiting for the new STAR WAS! It’s almost finally here!!!

Coco threepeats at box office as Star Wars: The Last Jedi looms

A week before Star Wars: The Last Jedi throws open the end-of-year floodgates, Coco is enjoying the lull.

With all the major studios forgoing new wide releases for the second week in a row, Disney and Pixar’s Day of the Dead-themed animated musical is set to top the box office for a third consecutive weekend, grossing an estimated $18.3 million in 3,748 theaters in the U.S. and Canada.

That would bring Coco’s domestic total to $135.5 million after 19 days in theaters, while an estimated $55.3 million from foreign markets this weekend would push its international total to $254 million (for a worldwide total of $389.5 million).

Directed by Lee Unkrich and co-directed by Adrian Molina, Coco centers on a 12-year-old Mexican boy (voiced by newcomer Anthony Gonzalez) who confronts his family’s ancestral ban on music. The cast includes Gael García Bernal, Benjamin Bratt, and Alanna Ubach. The film received excellent reviews from critics and an A-plus CinemaScore from moviegoers.

Meanwhile, James Franco’s meta-movie comedy The Disaster Artist is poised to break into the top five after expanding to 840 theaters from 19 last week. The A24 release is on pace for about $6.4 million, edging out Marvel’s threequel Thor: Ragnarok ($6.3 million) for fourth place and bringing its domestic total to $8 million.

Directed by and starring Franco, and based on Greg Sestero and Tom Bissell’s book of the same name, The Disaster Artist chronicles the making of Tommy Wiseau’s notoriously bad — and much beloved — 2003 independent film The Room. Critics have applauded Franco’s film, which also stars brother Dave Franco (as Sestero), Seth Rogen, Alison Brie, and Ari Graynor.

Rounding out the top five are Warner Bros. and DC’s Justice League at No. 2, with an estimated $9.6 million, and Lionsgate’s Wonder at No. 3, with an estimated $8.5 million.

The former film recently crossed the $200-million mark domestically and is now north of $600 million globally; the latter movie is on track to break $100 million by the end of the weekend.

Squeaking in to the top 10 is the ironically titled comedy Just Getting Started, which represents the final production from embattled upstart Broad Green Pictures. Starring Tommy Lee Jones, Morgan Freeman, and Rene Russo, and directed by Ron Shelton, the film is set to debut in 2,161 theaters with about $3.2 million.

On the specialty front, the darkly comic Tonya Harding biopic I, Tonya is bowing in four theaters with an estimated $245,602, which works out to a robust per-screen average of $61,400. The critically acclaimed film stars Margot Robbie as the infamous figure skater, along with Allison Janney, Sebastian Stan, and Julianne Nicholson. Craig Gillespie directed, and Neon/30West are distributing.

Next week marks the arrival of The Last Jedi, which is expected to be a huge blockbuster and will herald a slew of major holiday releases.

According to ComScore, overall box office is down 3.9 percent year-to-date. Check out the Dec. 8-10 figures below.

1. Coco — $18.3 million
2. Justice League — $9.6 million
3. Wonder — $8.5 million
4. The Disaster Artist — $6.4 million
5. Thor: Ragnarok — $6.3 million
6. Daddy’s Home 2 — $6 million
7. Murder on the Orient Express — $5.1 million
8. The Star — $3.7 million
9. Lady Bird — $3.5 million
10. Just Getting Started — $3.2 million

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How many did you notice?

‘Dunkirk’ tops 2017 movie mistakes list

Christopher Nolan’s Second World War epic Dunkirk was the most mistake-ridden movie of 2017, according to moviemistakes.com’s annual list of film flubs.

Eagle-eyed movie fans spotted 25 errors in the film, many of them historical, which landed the motion picture first place ahead of Beauty and the Beast and The Fate of the Furious.

Dunkirk’s slip-ups included German planes being the wrong colour and a British Rail train from the 1950s bringing troops back from the war in France in the mid-1940s.

But moviemistakes.com editor Jon Sandys’ favourite movie blunders of the year featured in scenes from the eighth Fast and the Furious movie and Wonder Woman.

He explains, “In Fate of the Furious (Vin Diesel’s character) Dom escapes his crew by crashing through a flower stall, leaving flowers and other debris on his car. Just seconds later we see his car again and it’s pristine – it looks like it’s just been washed.

“In Wonder Woman, as (Gal Gadot’s) Diana is translating in the general’s office, one of the buttons on her coat is undone/missing. As she approaches his desk, it’s suddenly visible on her coat where it should be.”

Spider-Man: Homecoming and It also feature on the top 10 countdown.

The full list is:

1. Dunkirk – 25 mistakes

2. Beauty and the Beast – 23 mistakes

3. Fast & Furious 8 – 20 mistakes

4. It – 18 mistakes

5. Wonder Woman – 15 mistakes

6. John Wick: Chapter 2 – 13 mistakes

7. The Circle – 12 mistakes

8. Spider-Man: Homecoming – 12 mistakes

9. Murder on the Orient Express – 11 mistakes

10. The Mummy – 9 mistakes

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It is still such an amazing movie. Such a classic, accidental or not.

An accidental classic, ‘Casablanca’ turns 75

Everyone may come to Rick’s Café Américain, but 75 years ago, no one was happy to be there. And they certainly didn’t think “Casablanca” was a hit, much less an iconic piece of cinema.

Humphrey Bogart — a heavy drinker whose third marriage was falling apart — got so grouchy while staging the climactic scene that the producer had to be called in to break up a fight between him and the director.

Ingrid Bergman — hungry for Hollywood stardom after a shaky start — fretted she didn’t know which of her leading men she would go off with at the end of the picture. She also worried that delays would cost her a plum part in “For Whom the Bells Tolls.’’

Paul Henreid — strong-armed into accepting what he called a “lousy, lousy script’’ — was convinced he would be laughed off the screen when his character showed up wearing a perfectly tailored, double-breasted, cream-colored suit after escaping from a concentration camp.

No fewer than seven writers struggled to balance the film’s intoxicatingly irresistible blend of suspense, romance, politics and cynical humor — delivering new pages to the set daily even as the topical World War II romantic thriller was being rushed through at an unusually fast pace for a production that ended up costing just over $1 million.

Oh, and the film’s composer hated “As Time Goes By’’ so much that he wanted to replace it.

“This was not a happy set,’’ says Alan K. Rode, author of a newly published biography of Michael Curtiz, the volatile Hungarian who directed “Casablanca” with consummate skill. “The pressure was really ceaseless.”

Shooting with an unfinished script on a tight deadline with much behind-the-scenes rancor has sunk countless movies. But “Casablanca’’ — which premiered on Nov. 26, 1942 in New York and went into national release on Jan. 23, 1943 — somehow became a masterwork that not only went on to the box office and Oscar glory in its era, but over the decades achieved a rare status as one of the most beloved and most quoted films ever.
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Lou Lumenick LOU LUMENICK
ENTERTAINMENT
An accidental classic, ‘Casablanca’ turns 75
By Lou Lumenick December 4, 2017 | 2:36pm
Everyone may come to Rick’s Café Américain, but 75 years ago, no one was happy to be there. And they certainly didn’t think “Casablanca” was a hit, much less an iconic piece of cinema.

Humphrey Bogart — a heavy drinker whose third marriage was falling apart — got so grouchy while staging the climactic scene that the producer had to be called in to break up a fight between him and the director.

Ingrid Bergman — hungry for Hollywood stardom after a shaky start — fretted she didn’t know which of her leading men she would go off with at the end of the picture. She also worried that delays would cost her a plum part in “For Whom the Bells Tolls.’’

Paul Henreid — strong-armed into accepting what he called a “lousy, lousy script’’ — was convinced he would be laughed off the screen when his character showed up wearing a perfectly tailored, double-breasted, cream-colored suit after escaping from a concentration camp.
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No fewer than seven writers struggled to balance the film’s intoxicatingly irresistible blend of suspense, romance, politics and cynical humor — delivering new pages to the set daily even as the topical World War II romantic thriller was being rushed through at an unusually fast pace for a production that ended up costing just over $1 million.

Oh, and the film’s composer hated “As Time Goes By’’ so much that he wanted to replace it.

“This was not a happy set,’’ says Alan K. Rode, author of a newly published biography of Michael Curtiz, the volatile Hungarian who directed “Casablanca” with consummate skill. “The pressure was really ceaseless.”

Shooting with an unfinished script on a tight deadline with much behind-the-scenes rancor has sunk countless movies. But “Casablanca’’ — which premiered on Nov. 26, 1942 in New York and went into national release on Jan. 23, 1943 — somehow became a masterwork that not only went on to the box office and Oscar glory in its era, but over the decades achieved a rare status as one of the most beloved and most quoted films ever.

Casablanca Official Trailer
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“Casablanca’’ was based on an unproduced play called “Everybody Comes to Rick’s’’ by Murray Burnett, a New York City high school teacher, and a divorced mother named Joan Allison. It fortuitously landed on the desk of a story analyst at Warner Brothers on Dec. 8, 1941 — the day after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

The timely story was snapped up by Hal Wallis, who had just signed a new producing contract that gave him unusual autonomy. It was in theaters less than a year later, a mind-boggling accomplishment even in an era when movie studios were factories with platoons of actors, director and writers under contract. “Casablanca’’ went before the cameras with a far-from-completed script on May 25, 1942 — after a mad five-month scramble to assemble what turned out to be a perfect cast.

After first-choice William Wyler (“The Letter’’) didn’t respond to a feeler, Wallis went with Warner’s top director. Curtiz had a reputation for ruthlessness and artistry, as well as the clout that came from a long string of hits. It was Curtiz who personally recruited real-life refugee extras, who shed genuine tears while singing “La Marseilles’’ to drown out the Nazis’ German anthem in the most rousing of the film’s many unforgettable scenes.

Studio chief Jack Warner suggested George Raft to play the romantically disillusioned Rick. Instead, Wallis, exercising his contractual prerogative to cast anyone he wanted, had the script tailored specifically for Bogart, who, after a long run of cookie-cutter tough guy roles, had emerged as a leading man thanks to “The Maltese Falcon.’’

The female lead in the play was an American divorcee of dubious morals until Casey Robinson, one of the script writers, made the inspired suggestion she be turned into a more virtuous European refugee. When MGM refused to loan Hedy Lamarr out for the part that became Ilsa Lund, Wallis approached independent producer David O. Selznick for Bergman, a Swede he had under contract. Selznick agreed because he felt “Casablanca’’ might finally put her over with American audiences after several false starts — and it certainly didn’t hurt for Bergman, who was not an American citizen, to play in an overtly patriotic movie.

When he was unable to secure the services of Philip Dorn — the Dutch actor who was Curtiz’ first choice to play the underground leader Victor Laszlo — Wallis leaned on Henreid, an Austrian Jew who had recently scored a huge hit in the romantic weepie “Now, Voyager’’ opposite Bette Davis. In addition to disdaining the script, Henreid scorned the idea of playing a secondary character, no matter how noble. The actor’s ego was massaged with the offer of co-star billing with Bogart and Bergman.

As difficult as the casting was, it was a piece of cake compared to the script-writing process, which continued by fits and stars until the final scene was shot on Aug. 3 — and even after.

The script was first assigned to Julius and Philip Epstein, twin wits credited with most of the movie’s memorable lines, including “I’m shocked, shocked that gambling is going on’’ and “round up the usual suspects.’’ When they were called to Washington to work on war documentaries, the project was taken over by Howard Koch, an avowed liberal who beefed up the film’s political elements. The Epsteins returned and tweaked some — but hardly all — of Koch’s work.

But Wallis and Curtiz still felt the crucial love story needed more heart, and turned to Robinson, the studio’s top paid writer, who had earlier written a story analysis. Robinson joined the team — beginning just five days before cameras started rolling — but thought so little of the story he turned down a shared screen credit, which would have eventually provided his only Oscar.

Somehow, the seemingly chaotic efforts of a disparate group of writers — who, with the exception of Epstein, who died in 1952, argued publicly for decades over who deserved credit — managed to produce what’s still taught as a model of cohesive storytelling in screenwriting classes.

“The Epsteins needed Koch to bring in the moral background, and Koch needed the Epsteins to keep things from getting too preachy,’’ says Noah Isenberg, author of the 2016 book “We’ll Always Have Casablanca: The Life, Legend and Afterlife of Hollywood’s Most Beloved Movie.’’ “And the three of them needed Casey Robinson to crucially shape the romance, especially in the Paris flashbacks. And Curtiz had to keep things moving through many dialogue-heavy scenes.’’

Conflicts continued to dog “Casablanca’’ straight through the shoot, and even after the cameras stopped rolling. There are so many legends surrounding the film’s chaotic genesis that not all of them may be entirely true.

Take the famous story that “As Time Goes By’’ only remained in the picture because Ingrid Bergman’s hair was cut short for her role in “For Whom the Bell Tolls’’ by the time composer Max Steiner wrote his own love theme to replace it. Rode and Isenberg point to the absence of memos corroborating this.

“It’s true that Steiner told his wife he hated ‘As Time Goes By,’ but there’s probably no way they could have gotten Bergman back from location for retakes,’’ Isenberg says. “Steiner ended up using no less than 14 different arrangements of the song in his score, which is one of his best remembered.’’

Bergman insisted in her memoirs that Curtiz told her to “play it in between’’ when she asked the director which man Ilsa would leave Casablanca with. Yet Isenberg and Rode both point to evidence that it was clear from the outset that no matter what her feelings for Rick, Victor would have to be the ultimate romantic victor. That’s the way the play ends, and Robinson had pointed out in a memo before he officially joined the screenwriting team that the film just wouldn’t soar without Rick sacrificing the love of his life for the common good.

“The Production Code Authority would never have allowed a married woman like Ilsa to go off with Rick,’’ says Rode, referring to the studio’s self-censoring system.

The PCA was unusually lenient in other areas, though, notably overlooking the sexual implications of Rick and Ilsa’s late-night encounter where she threatens to shoot him to obtain exit visas and they fall into an embrace. Curtiz cut to a shot of a phallic airport tower and Rick smoking what looks suspiciously like a post-coital cigarette. Nobody, then or now, doesn’t think that they had a steamy reunion between shots.

Even if it was a foregone conclusion that Ilsa would dutifully leave for Lisbon with her husband, the screenwriters were still struggling about the exact plot machinations necessary to get there.

Bogart — who may have ad-libbed the “here’s looking at you kid’’ and “of all the gin joints’’ lines — was especially tense while shooting the climactic sequence at the airport, nearly coming to blows with Curtiz over how his lines should be delivered.

After Wallis calmed them down, there were more last-minute rewrites on the set — one of which introduced the entirely new concept that Rick would go off with Renault and join the Free French after Ilsa leaves with Victor and Rick shoots Major Strasser. “And that should just about cover our expenses’’ was the final line penciled into the much-revised final shooting script.

But Wallis still wasn’t totally happy, and a couple of weeks later he personally came up with Rick’s immortal rejoinder after that: “Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.’’

Rains was 3,000 miles away from Burbank by this point. Fortunately, he and Bogart had turned their backs to the camera after the “expenses’’ line, so they merely had to call back Bogart to dub the new line over the existing footage.

The producer was tempted to further tinker after some audience members at a sneak preview suggested a coda. He was all set to shoot a brief new scene with Rick and Renault fighting with a garrison of Free French when Selznick — the mastermind behind “Gone With the Wind’’ — persuasively argued that “Casablanca’’ was an already perfect movie.

Jack Warner agreed. Though planned for a summer 1943 release, he was eager to rush it out after Allied forces invaded the real-life Casablanca in early November 1942. The film opened on Thanksgiving Day in New York, and fueled by the headlines and rave reviews, was a smash hit. There was more good luck: a summit by Allied leaders in Casablanca further bolstered the film’s national opening two months later. A year after that, it was nominated for eight Oscars, winning for picture, director and screenplay.

But it took Bogart’s death on Jan. 14, 1957 at the age of 57 — prompting “Casablanca’’ to arrive on TV the following year — to fully launch a never-ending love affair with moviegoers that is still going strong after three-quarters of century.

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I was hoping to see THE DISASTER ARTIST this weekend but didn’t find the time. Soon!!

Coco delivers box office encore on quiet weekend

On a quiet weekend with no new wide releases from the major studios, Disney and Pixar’s Coco is still managing to make some noise. The Día de los Muertos-themed animated musical is on track to top the box office for the second week in a row, grossing about $26.1 million from 3,987 theaters in the U.S. and Canada. Meanwhile, James Franco’s moviemaking comedy The Disaster Artist and Guillermo del Toro’s sci-fi romance The Shape of Water are both off to strong starts in limited release.

Bolstered by glowing reviews from critics and an A-plus CinemaScore from moviegoers, Coco is poised to drop off 49 percent in its sophomore weekend, a solid figure that puts its estimated domestic total at $108.7 million after 12 days in theaters. The film is also set to take in about $69 million overseas, which would bring its international total to $171.3 million.

Directed by Lee Unkrich and co-directed by Adrian Molina, Coco centers on a 12-year-old Mexican boy (voiced by newcomer Anthony Gonzalez) who confronts his family’s ancestral ban on music. The cast includes Gael García Bernal, Benjamin Bratt, and Alanna Ubach.

The rest of the weekend top five are also repeats. Warner Bros’. superhero tentpole Justice League will take second place with about $16.6 million, bringing its 17-day domestic total to $197.3 million and its worldwide total to $567.4 million. The film, which is directed by Zack Snyder (with additional work by Joss Whedon) and stars Ben Affleck, Gal Gadot, and Henry Cavill, received mixed reviews and a B-plus CinemaScore.

Lionsgate’s family film Wonder is No. 3, with about $12.5 million; Disney’s superhero sequel Thor: Ragnarok is No. 4, with about $9.7 million; and Paramount’s paternal comedy Daddy’s Home 2 is No. 5, with about $7.5 million.

On the specialty front, A24’s The Disaster Artist is poised to take in an estimated $1.2 million from 19 locations, for a robust per-theater average of $64,254.

Directed by and starring Franco, and based on Greg Sestero and Tom Bissell’s book of the same name, The Disaster Artist chronicles the making of Tommy Wiseau’s notorious 2003 independent film The Room, which has been called “the Citizen Kane of bad movies.” Critics have lauded Franco’s film, which also stars brother Dave Franco (as Sestero), Seth Rogen, Alison Brie, and Ari Graynor. It expands to 800 theaters next week.

Scoring the best per-theater average of the weekend, and one of the best of the year, is Fox Searchlight’s The Shape of Water. It’s on pace to earn about $167,000 from two locations, which works out to $83,400 per theater.

Set against the backdrop of the Cold War, Del Toro’s film centers on a mute woman (played by Sally Hawkins) who works a janitor at a government research center and forms an unlikely bond with a captured amphibious humanoid known as the Asset (Doug Jones). The film has also received glowing reviews.

Also opening in limited release, though to less impressive numbers and reviews, is Woody Allen’s latest, Wonder Wheel. The Amazon release is set to take in about $140,555 from five locations, for a per-theater average of $28,111.

According to ComScore, overall box office is down 3.9 percent year-to-date. Check out the Dec. 1-3 figures below.

1. Coco — $26.1 million
2. Justice League — $16.6 million
3. Wonder — $12.5 million
4. Thor: Ragnarok — $9.7 million
5. Daddy’s Home 2 — $7.5 million
6. Murder on the Orient Express — $6.7 million
7. Lady Bird — $4.5 million
8. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri — $4.5 million
9. The Star — $4 million
10. A Bad Moms Christmas — $3.5 million

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Movies

Still can’t decide if I need to see COCO or not. I probably will, but I’m in no rush.

Coco tops Thanksgiving box office with $71.2 million; Justice League No. 2

Coco has struck a chord. Disney and Pixar’s vibrant Día de los Muertos-themed animated musical is poised to debut with an estimated $71.2 million from 3,987 theaters in the U.S. and Canada over the long holiday weekend, easily displacing last week’s box office champ, the struggling superhero team-up Justice League.

Coco‘s five-day bow — $49 million of which comes from the Friday-Sunday frame — marks the fourth-highest Thanksgiving opening ever, not adjusting for inflation, behind Frozen ($93.6 million), Moana ($82.1 million), and Toy Story 2 ($80.1 million). It also gives Disney 10 of the top 11 Turkey Day openings all time and comes as good news for Pixar in the wake of co-founder John Lasseter taking a six-month leave due to unspecified “missteps” that made some staffers feel “disrespected or uncomfortable.”

Directed by Lee Unkrich and co-directed by Adrian Molina, Coco received glowing reviews from critics (it’s currently rated 96% “fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes) and a coveted A-plus CinemaScore from moviegoers, suggesting that word of mouth should be strong. The film, which centers on a 12-year-old Mexican boy who confronts his family’s ancestral ban on music, has grossed an additional $82.2 million from foreign markets. Coco‘s cast includes newcomer Anthony Gonzalez, Gael García Bernal, Benjamin Bratt, and Alanna Ubach.

In second place, Warner Bros. and DC Entertainment’s big-budget spectacle Justice League is on track to take in about $63 million over five days, and $40.7 million Friday-Sunday. The latter figure represents a 57 percent decline from an underwhelming first weekend and doesn’t bode particularly well for the uneven DC Extended Universe, which Justice League was intended to be the standard-bearer for.

That said, the Zack Snyder-directed movie has added about $309.8 million overseas, putting its worldwide total at $481.3 million. Despite unenthusiastic reviews and a mediocre B-plus CinemaScore, Justice League has been buoyed by a star-studded cast that includes Gal Gadot, Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Ray Fisher, Jason Momoa, and Ezra Miller. (Joss Whedon, an alum of Disney and Marvel’s rival Avengers franchise, also oversaw extensive reshoots as Snyder dealt with a family tragedy.)

Rounding out the top five this weekend are a trio of holdovers: Lionsgate’s family film Wonder, with about $32.3 million over five days ($22.3 million Friday-Sunday); Disney’s superhero threequel Thor: Ragnarok, with about $24.3 million over five days ($16.8 million Friday-Sunday); and Paramount’s comedy Daddy’s Home 2, with about $18.6 million over five days ($13.3 million Friday-Sunday).

In limited release, director Luca Guadagnino’s critically acclaimed love story Call Me by Your Name is set to gross an estimated $405,000 (Friday-Sunday) from four locations in New York and Los Angeles, for a per-theater average of $101,000 per screen — the highest such mark this year. Timothée Chalamet and Armie Hammer star in the film, about an affair between a precocious 17-year-old boy and a mysterious, handsome grad student in northern Italy. Sony Pictures Classics is distributing.

Also notching a solid opening this weekend is Focus Features’ World War II drama Darkest Hour, starring Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill. Playing in four locations, it’s on pace for about $176,000 Friday-Sunday, for a per-theater average of $44,005. (Its five-day opening is estimated at $248,000.)

Meanwhile, the Denzel Washington legal drama Roman J. Israel Esq. expanded from four theaters to 1,669 but failed to connect with audiences, who gave it a soft B CinemaScore. The Sony release on track to gross about $6.2 million over five days and $4.5 million Friday-Sunday, good for ninth place.

According to ComScore, overall box office is down 4 percent year-to-date. Check out the Nov. 24-26 figures below.

1. Coco — $49 million ($71.2 million five-day)
2. Justice League — $40.7 million ($63 million five-day)
3. Wonder — $22.3 million ($32.3 million five-day)
4. Thor: Ragnarok — $16.8 million ($24.3 million five-day)
5. Daddy’s Home 2 — $13.3 million ($18.6 million five-day)
6. Murder on the Orient Express — $13 million ($18.6 million five-day)
7. The Star — $6.9 million ($9.5 million five-day)
8. A Bad Moms Christmas — $5 million ($6.8 million five-day)
9. Roman J. Israel Esq. — $4.5 million ($6.2 million five-day)
10. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri — $4.4 million ($$5.9 million five-day)

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Movies

I went to JUSTICE LEAGUE with low, low, low expectations and thought it wasn’t bad. It’s not great but it’s not as awful as it could have been.

Justice League underwhelms at box office with $96 million opening

DC Comics’ mightiest heroes are uniting on the big screen for the first time, saving the world from certain doom, and topping the box office in Justice League — but the highly anticipated film is nonetheless falling short of expectations. Warner Bros’. superhero team-up is on track to gross an estimated $96 million in the U.S. and Canada during its first weekend in theaters, dominating the competition but coming in well below analysts’ projections of about $110 million.

The fifth installment of the DC Extended Universe marks the franchise’s first sub-$100-million domestic debut, trailing Wonder Woman ($103.3 million), Suicide Squad ($133.7 million), Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice ($166 million), and Man of Steel ($116.6 million). It’s also not in the same, ahem, league as Disney and Marvel’s The Avengers ($207.4 million) and Avengers: Age of Ultron ($191.3 million).

While $96 million is no small sum, Justice League reportedly cost a hefty $250 million-$300 million to make, and it’s intended to be a linchpin of one of Warner Bros’. signature brands. On the plus side, the film is faring well overseas, where it’s poised to take in $185.5 million.

Directed by Zack Snyder — with extensive reshoots overseen by Avengers alum Joss Whedon while Snyder dealt with a family tragedy — Justice League met with mixed to negative reviews (better than BVS but much worse than Wonder Woman) and received a mediocre B-plus CinemaScore.

The film stars Ben Affleck as Batman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ezra Miller as the Flash, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, and Henry Cavill as Superman, with Ciarán Hinds voicing the villain Steppenwolf.

In second place, the new Julia Roberts drama Wonder is exceeding expectations with an estimated $27.1 million, to go along with an A-plus CinemaScore and solid reviews. The modestly budgeted Lionsgate release had been pegged for an opening in the ballpark of $10 million.

Directed by Stephen Chbosky and based on R.J. Palacio’s middle-grade novel of the same name, Wonder centers on a young boy (played by Jacob Tremblay) coping with a facial deformity and trying to fit in at a new school. Roberts plays the boy’s mother, and Owen Wilson portrays his father.

Disney’s superhero threequel Thor: Ragnarok is holding steady in third place with an estimated $21.8 million in its third weekend. That brings the domestic total to $247.4 million, and the worldwide total to $738.1 million.

Rounding out the top five — and continuing their battle from last week — are Paramount’s paternal comedy Daddy’s Home 2, with about $14.8 million, and Fox’s whodunit Murder on the Orient Express, with about $13.8 million.

This weekend’s other new wide release, Sony’s faith-based animated movie The Star, is poised to take in an estimated $10 million, good for the No. 6 spot.

Sony also began rolling out Dan Gilroy and Denzel Washington’s legal drama Roman J. Israel, Esq., which will gross about $65,000 from four locations, for a a per-theater average of $16,250. The film, which has received mixed reviews, will expand into about 1,500 theaters Wednesday.

According to ComScore, overall box office is down 4.3 percent year-to-date. Check out the Nov. 17-19 figures below.

1. Justice League — $96 million
2. Wonder — $27.1 million
3. Thor: Ragnarok — $21.8 million
4. Daddy’s Home 2 — $14.8 million
5. Murder on the Orient Express — $13.8 million
6. The Star — $10 million
7. A Bad Moms Christmas — $6.9 million
8. Lady Bird — $2.5 million
9. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri — $1.1 million
10. Jigsaw — $1.1 million

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Movies

I didn’t like the first one at all, and I know the sequel is going to be horrible, but I still want to see DADDY’S HOME 2.

Thor: Ragnarok continues box office reign; Daddy’s Home 2 edging Orient Express

The god of thunder is still making rain. Thor: Ragnarok is on track to gross an estimated $56.6 million during its second weekend in U.S. and Canadian theaters, continuing its box office domination as Daddy’s Home 2 and Murder on the Orient Express battle for the No. 2 spot. That activity should come as welcome news in Hollywood after a sluggish October.

Bolstered by strong reviews and good word of mouth (as evidenced by an A CinemaScore) Ragnarok is poised to decline 54 percent from its debut weekend, bringing its domestic total to $211.6 million after 10 days in theaters. The film, which marks the third installment of Disney’s Thor franchise and the 17th film in the Marvel cinematic universe, has also grossed about $438.5 million overseas, with $75.9 million of that coming in this weekend.

Taika Waititi directed Ragnarok, which finds Chris Hemsworth’s hammer-wielding superhero teaming up with Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk to battle the goddess of death, Hela (Cate Blanchett). Tom Hiddleston, Tessa Thompson, and Jeff Goldblum also costar.

In a showdown for second place, Paramount’s comedy sequel Daddy’s Home 2 is edging out Fox’s whodunit Murder on the Orient Express, with both movies coming in at the higher end of analysts’ projections.

Daddy’s Home 2 is on track to take in about $30 million — higher than the estimated $28.2 million of Orient Express but 23 percent lower than the $38.7 million managed by the original Daddy’s Home in 2015. Like its predecessor, Daddy’s Home 2 has been shredded by movie critics, although it fared better with moviegoers, earning an A-minus CinemaScore (an improvement on the original’s B-plus).

Once again starring Will Ferrell as a mild-mannered stepfather who engages in a rivalry with with his wife’s macho ex-husband (Mark Wahlberg), Daddy’s Home 2 ups the ante by bringing in those characters’ own dads, played by John Lithgow and Mel Gibson. Sean Anders returned to direct.

Murder on the Orient Express, meanwhile, is close behind despite receiving mixed reviews and a tepid B CinemaScore. Directed by Kenneth Branagh, who also stars as the brilliant Belgian detective Hercule Poirot, the mystery comes as the second big-screen adaptation of Agatha Christie’s 1934 novel about a seemingly inexplicable slaying aboard a snowbound train. The ensemble cast includes Johnny Depp, Michelle Pfeiffer, Penélope Cruz, Judi Dench, Daisy Ridley, and Leslie Odom Jr.

In line for fourth place is another comedy sequel, STX’s A Bad Mom’s Christmas. It’s on track to gross about $11.5 million, which represents a decline of just 31 percent from its debut last weekend, suggesting the film could have staying power. Lionsgate’s horror reboot Jigsaw rounds out the top five with an estimated $3.4 million.

In limited release, Fox Searchlight’s critically acclaimed black comedy Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing Missouri is poised to take in about $320,000 from just four locations; that works out to a per-theater average of $80,000, one of the highest such figures of the year. Directed by Martin McDonagh (In Bruges), the film stars Frances McDormand as a grieving mother who calls out local authorities for their lack of progress in finding her daughter’s killer.

Also on the specialty front, Greta Gerwig’s buzzed-about directorial debut, Lady Bird, is set to crack the top 10 in its second weekend, with an estimated $1.2 million from just 37 theaters. A24 released the coming-of-age tale, starring Saoirse Ronan, Laurie Metcalf, and Tracy Letts.

According to ComScore, overall box office is down 4.9 percent year-to-date. Check out the Nov. 10-12 figures below.

1. Thor: Ragnarok — $56.6 million
2. Daddy’s Home 2 — $30 million
3. Murder on the Orient Express — $28.2 million
4. A Bad Moms Christmas — $11.5 million
5. Jigsaw — $3.4 million
6. Boo 2: A Madea Halloween — $2.1 million
7. Geostorm — $1.5 million
8. Blade Runner 2049 — $1.4 million
9. Happy Death Day — $1.3 million
10. Lady Bird — $1.2 million