'Inside Man' Thrills At Box Office
Bank Hostage Flick Debutes At No. 1, 'V For Vendetta' No. 2
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Play CBS Video Video Denzel Dishes On 'Inside Man' Stars don't get much bigger than Denzel Washington. The Academy Award winner has done it all, from period dramas to gritty action films. He spoke with Julie Chen about "Inside Man."
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Video Inside 'Inside Man' Denzel Washington, Jodie Foster and Clive Owen are lighting up the big screen in Spike Lee's latest movie, "Inside Man." Tracie Strahan has the inside scoop on this high-stakes bank heist.
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Video Clive Owen's 'Inside' Role Clive Owen stars alongside Denzel Washington in the new Spike Lee film "The Inside Man." Owen, who plays a sly bank robber, speaks with Harry Smith about the film.
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Denzel Washington -, left, and Clive Owen in "The Inside Man." (AP)
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Photo Essay Denzel Washington A superstar with two Oscars, $20 million deals and "sexy man" status.
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Photo Essay 'Inside Man' Stars Denzel Washington and Jodie Foster walk the red carpet for their new movie, directed by Spike Lee.
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Photos 'V For Vendetta' Natalie Portman and her costars weather London rains at the premiere of their new movie
Their bank-hostage thriller "Inside Man," an unusually commercial project for director Lee, debuted as the No. 1 weekend film with $29 million — the best opening ever for both the filmmaker and his star, according to studio estimates Sunday.
Universal's "Inside Man" knocked off the previous weekend's top movie, the Warner Bros. action tale "V for Vendetta," which slipped to second with $12.3 million. "V for Vendetta" raised its 10-day total to $46.2 million.
Disney's fright flick "Stay Alive," featuring Frankie Muniz in a tale about a video game that brings death to its players, premiered in third place with $11.2 million.
The weekend's other new wide release, Lionsgate's "Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector," a gross-out romp starring comic Dan Whitney investigating a food-poisoning outbreak, opened at No. 7 with $7.05 million.
Stung by declining revenues over the last year, Hollywood broke out of its latest slump, with the top-12 movies grossing $98.9 million, up 10.6 percent from the same weekend a year ago. The upswing followed a month of declines.
The solid weekend was a prelude to this Friday's debut of the animated sequel "Ice Age: The Meltdown," considered an early lead-in to a summer season that launches with Tom Cruise's "Mission: Impossible 3" on May 5.
"This was a good kickoff to what I think will be a pretty good run leading up to summer," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.
"Inside Man," starring Washington, Jodie Foster and Clive Owen in a story of cops against robbers during a Manhattan bank heist, exceeded box-office expectations for distributor Universal, which had figured on a $20 million weekend at best.
Lee and Washington's earlier collaborations include "Malcolm X" and "He Got Game."
At $29 million, "Inside Man" topped Washington's previous best opening weekend of $22.8 million for "Man on Fire" and Lee's previous best of $11.1 million for "The Original Kings of Comedy."
Two-thirds of viewers for "Inside Man" were older than 30, a promising sign for Hollywood, whose key audience of young males has been less inclined to go to the movies with so many other entertainment distractions such as video games and DVDs.
"They were motivated to go. They love the material, they love the actor," said Nikki Rocco, Universal's head of distribution. "It's the motivation to get them to go to the movies, and I hope that we as an industry keep that up. If we want the business to survive, we have to continue to find ways to motivate them."
"Inside Man" also took in $9.6 million over its opening weekend in 18 other countries.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures will be released Monday.
1. "Inside Man," $29 million.
2. "V for Vendetta," $12.3 million.
3. "Stay Alive," $11.2 million.
4. "Failure to Launch," $10.8 million.
5. "The Shaggy Dog," $9.1 million.
6. "She's the Man," $7.4 million.
7. "Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector," $7.05 million.
8. "The Hills Have Eyes," $4.25 million.
9. "Eight Below," $2.7 million.
10. "16 Blocks," $2.2 million.
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