CBS/AP/ February 18, 2013, 10:35 AM

"A Good Day to Die Hard" tops box office with $25M debut

This film image released by 20th Century Fox shows Bruce Willis as John McClane, left, Jai Courtney as his son Jack, center and Sebastian Koch as Komarov in a scene from "A Good Day to Die Hard." (AP Photo/20th Century Fox, Frank Masi)

This film image released by 20th Century Fox shows Bruce Willis as John McClane, left, Jai Courtney as his son Jack, center and Sebastian Koch as Komarov in a scene from "A Good Day to Die Hard." (AP Photo/20th Century Fox, Frank Masi) / Frank Masi

Bruce Willis remains a die-hard at the box office.

The actor's action sequel "A Good Day to Die Hard" debuted as the weekend's top draw, earning $25 million from Friday to Sunday. The 20th Century Fox release raised its domestic total to $33.2 million since opening Thursday for Valentine's Day to get a jump on the long President's Day weekend.

The movie comes 25 years after the original "Die Hard" and six years after "Live Free or Die Hard," the hit that resurrected the franchise centered on Willis' relentless New York City cop John McClane.

The previous weekend's No. 1 movie, Universal's comedy "Identity Thief" starring Jason Bateman and Melissa McCarthy, was a close second with $23.4 million to lift its haul to $70.7 million.

Debuting at No. 3 with $21.4 million was Relativity Media's romance "Safe Haven," starring Julianne Hough and Josh Duhamel in an adaptation of the Nicholas Sparks novel about a woman who flees her abusive husband and takes up with a sensitive widower. Since opening on Valentine's Day, "Safe Haven" has taken in $30.3 million.

The Weinstein Co. animated tale "Escape from Planet Earth" opened at No. 4 with $16.1 million. With a voice cast that includes Brendan Fraser, Jessica Alba, Sarah Jessica Parker and Rob Corddry, the movie follows the adventures of aliens captured by the U.S. military.

Making a weak debut at No. 6 was the Warner Bros. teen fantasy "Beautiful Creatures," which pulled in $7.5 million for the weekend and $10 million since opening Thursday. The movie is based on the first in the best-selling book series about a Southern misfit (Alden Ehrenreich) who falls under the spell of a teen witch (Alice Englert).

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Bruce Willis talks "A Good Day to Die Hard"

"A Good Day to Die Hard" did solid business despite bad reviews for the latest installment, which sends Willis' McClane to Moscow in search of his estranged son, an undercover spy who winds up teaming with the old man against Russian bad guys. (Willis recently spoke to CBSNews.com about the latest "Die Hard" installment, in the video at left).

The movie's success follows notable flops from two other holdovers of the 1980s action scene, Sylvester Stallone with "Bullet to the Head" and Arnold Schwarzenegger with "The Last Stand."

"There's still life left in the 'Die Hard' franchise. Given the fact that pretty much every other R-rated action movie that's come out this year has completely fallen flat, this is a pretty good showing," said Paul Dergarabedian, an analyst for box-office tracker Hollywood.com. Willis is "one of the old-guard action stars who still has a solid career going, whereas a lot of these aging action heroes, unless they're in an ensemble cast, they're not able to draw audiences the way they used to."

Overall Hollywood business remained slow, with revenues off for the fourth-straight weekend compared to the same period last year. Domestic business from Friday to Sunday totaled $141 million, down 9.4 percent from the same weekend a year ago, when "Safe House" and "The Vow" led the way with about $23 million each.

A bright spot this year has been strong business for top Oscars contenders leading up to next Sunday's Academy Awards telecast. The weekend's top-20 films included eight of the nine best-picture nominees, seven of which have either topped $100 million domestically or are close.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
3 Comments Add a Comment
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HobartSchmenge says:
For the love of God, Bruce -- enough with the Die Hard movies. Two were enough. The entire premise has run its course. The franchise is tired, it's old, it's run out of steam and suffers from a chronic case of deja vu.
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HobartSchmenge replies:
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This just in: the next installment in this insufferable series will be titled "Die Already."
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hypnotoad72 says:
"Overall Hollywood business remained slow, with revenues off for the fourth-straight weekend compared to the same period last year. "

And next year the same thing will be said.

And the next...

And the next...

Anyone can say "just be more creative", but I could make the bestest ever movie and if people don't have the money then they won't come... an economy is more than just a supply-side and the demand-side does not get its money off of a tree or printing press, unlike the subsidies and bailouts the supply-side enjoys on a very regular basis.
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