Ancient Battle Movie Is Tops At Box Office
"300," Tale Of Spartans Vs Persians, Rakes In $70M In Opening Weekend
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So, which look is better? Gerard Butler, at the premiere of "300" March 5, 2007, in Los Angeles, poses by a photo of himself in character as Leonidas, king of the Greek city-state of Sparta. (AP)
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A detail from the movie poster for "300," which retells the story of the ancient battle of Thermopylae, in which 300 Spartan soldiers are said to have fought off a much larger group of Persian invaders. (Warner Bros)
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That's about $233,000 for every one of the legendary 300 Spartan soldiers who fought off a much larger Persian force in the epic battle.
"On a Spartan-by-Spartan basis, that's a lot of money," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Media By Numbers. "Summer came a little early, because this is a summer-style opening."
The number of movie-goers for the Warner Bros. epic "300" outnumbered crowds for the rest of the top-10 movies combined. If the estimate holds when final numbers are released Monday, "300" would break the record for best March debut ever, topping the $68 million haul for "Ice Age: The Meltdown" last year.
"The violence doesn't bother anybody because it's done in a way that's not offensive," said Dan Fellman, head of distribution at Warner Bros. "People love the movie, they love the originality."
The total for "300" includes $3.4 million from 62 IMAX theaters, a record opening weekend for the large-screen format.
Buoyed by "300" and some solid holdovers, Hollywood business soared, with the top 12 movies totaling $139.4 million, up 49 percent from the same weekend last year.
"300" bumped off the previous weekend's No. 1 movie, Disney's "Wild Hogs," which slipped to second place but held up well with $28 million, raising its total to $77.4 million.
In limited release, Fox Searchlight's immigrant drama "The Namesake" opened strongly with $250,762 in six theaters, averaging $41,794. Centered on an Indian family's assimilation in America, "The Namesake" expands to more theaters Friday.
Going into the weekend, movie attendance had been lagging 1 percent behind last year because of a slump in January and February. Attendance now is up nearly 2 percent for the year because of the strong weekend, according to Media By Numbers.
Directed by Zack Snyder ("Dawn of the Dead"), "300" presents the actors against digitally created backgrounds to re-create the look of Miller's graphic novel, a technique similar to that used on the movie adaptation of Miller's "Sin City."
"It's a new-fashioned version of an epic movie. Great, old-fashioned storytelling with all the brilliant use of the technology available to us now," "300" producer Mark Canton said Sunday.
Heavy on violence, the movie had an R rating, normally a damper on a film's blockbuster potential. But "300" wound up with the third-best debut ever for an R-rated movie, behind "The Matrix Reloaded" at $91.8 million and "The Passion of the Christ" at $83.8 million.
"The violence doesn't bother anybody because it's done in a way that's not offensive," said Dan Fellman, Warner Bros. head of distribution. "People love the movie, they love the originality. The best thing you can have for a film is great word of mouth. When the public is selling the movie for you, that's when you have a real success."
Here are the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC:
1. "300," $70 million.
2. "Wild Hogs," $28 million.
3. "Bridge to Terabithia," $6.9 million.
4. "Ghost Rider," $6.8 million.
5. "Zodiac," $6.77 million.
6. "The Number 23," $4.33 million.
7. "Norbit," $4.3 million.
8. "Music and Lyrics," $3.8 million.
9. "Breach, $2.6 million.
10. "Amazing Grace," $2.5 million.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Much much better than anyone thought it would be. http://www.theweeklydonut.org/index.php/2007/03/08/3189/
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- I don't understand why people and even reviewers assume that a stylized movie such as this borders on a documentary! Its obvious from the previews this is an action movie where Hollywood took a tremendous amount of license.
Information on this battle is very sketchy at best. For example historians have no idea concerning the size of the Persian army (somewhere between 100K and 2000K).
What is known is a huge army tried to squeeze through a bottleneck and it fought a battle on the enemy's choice of battle fields. Both are known in military theory as very bad. So, from the Persian viewpoint its a story of hindsight: should-a, would-a, could-a. - Reply to this comment
- Try reading "The Gates of Fire", by Steven Pressfield, a full length novel about Thermopylae. No pictures. You have to use your imagination. One of the best books I ever read, and I read a lot. But the actual place in Greece does not look like it used to, 2500 years ago, and nothing at all like "300" depicts it. I also doubt the Spartans charged out of their phalanx formation as "300" shows. They would have been cut down. Their strength was in the heavy infantry formation, close up, should to shoulder, and backed up by the man behind, pressing his shield into the shoulders of the man in front.
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Ex-NBA ref Tim Donaghy 



