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The New York Times
"Chuck And Larry"
Overtake "Potter"
At Box Office
By REUTERS,
nytimes.com on the Web, July 22, 2007
LOS ANGELES -- Adam Sandler's
faux gay comedy "I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry" charmed $34.8 million from
moviegoers its first weekend in theaters to nudge the latest "Harry Potter" film
from the top of the box office, according to studio estimates on Sunday.
"Chuck and Larry," starring Sandler and Kevin James as heterosexual Brooklyn
firefighters who pose as a gay couple to qualify for domestic-partner benefits,
underscored Sandler's box-office clout, although it fell short of some of his
past film openings.
"Anger Management," "Big Daddy" and "Click" -- all starring Sandler -- each
grossed more than $40 million in the first weekend, according to ticket sales
tracker Media By Numbers. Still, executives at Universal Pictures,
distributor for "Chuck and Larry," said they were happy with its opening
performance.
"Adam has a huge, broad fan base. Everything seemed to click," said Nikki
Rocco, president of domestic distribution for Universal, a unit of General
Electric Co.'s NBC Universal.
"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," the fifth film based on J.K.
Rowling's blockbuster book series about the bespectacled British boy wizard,
slipped to No. 2 in its second weekend at the North American box office with
ticket sales of $32.2 million as Rowling's eagerly awaited seventh and final
novel was released in bookstores.
The "Harry Potter" film franchise has so far pulled in more than $1.3 billion in
the United States and Canada alone, according to the Web site Box Office Mojo.
Opening at No. 3 with $27.8 million this weekend was "Hairspray," the musical
that features a cross-dressing John Travolta, and Michelle Pfeiffer as a racist
producer.
Like the successful Broadway show that came before it, "Hairspray" was inspired
by film director John Waters' quirky 1988 comedy about an unpopular teenager who
longs to dance on a television show reminiscent of the legendary "American
Bandstand."
Alien robot movie "Transformers," co-produced by Paramount Pictures and its
DreamWorks division, landed in fourth place with sales of $20.5 million in its
third week in theaters.
The big-budget film based on the popular line of toys that transform from cars
and planes to good-guy Autobots and their enemy Decepticons, has amassed U.S.
and Canadian sales of $263 million since its release, compared with $207.5
million for "Potter," released by Warner Bros. Pictures.
The computer-animated adventure "Ratatouille" rounded out the top five, cooking
up $11 million and taking its overall total to $165.6 million.
The film, produced by Walt Disney Co. units Pixar Animation Studios and Walt
Disney Pictures, tells the story of a gastronomically obsessed rat who dreams of
becoming a chef in Paris.
North American box office revenue so far this year is up 4.4 percent to $5.5
billion on slightly higher attendance of 0.7 percent.
Final box office results are due on Monday.
(Additional reporting by Steve Gorman)
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