LOS ANGELES, May 27, 2007

"Pirates" Doesn't Steal Box Office Record

"At World's End" Earns $112 Million, 5th Biggest Opening Weekend Ever

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  • Geoffrey Rush and Johnny Depp in a scenes from

    Geoffrey Rush and Johnny Depp in a scenes from "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End."  (DISNEY)

(AP)  Box-office treasure is a little harder to come by on the new voyage of "Pirates of the Caribbean."

The third installment in the Walt Disney Co. franchise, "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End," hauled in $112.5 million from Friday to Sunday, well below last summer's $135.6 million opening weekend for its predecessor, "Dead Man's Chest."

"At World's End" had the fifth-biggest three-day opening ever, with this month's "Spider-Man 3" ($151.1 million) and "Shrek the Third" ($121.6 million) both outperforming it.

Adding in $14 million from Thursday night preview screenings, "At World's End" had taken in $126.5 million domestically, according to studio estimates Sunday. The Thursday night screenings skewed the weekend figures for "At World's End," which likely would have done much of that business on Friday without those previews.

"At World's End" took in an additional $205.5 million internationally since it began rolling out overseas Wednesday, putting its worldwide total at $332 million.

Though it missed out on key box-office records, "At World's End" is on course to surpass last year's "X-Men: The Last Stand," which had the best four-day Memorial Day weekend debut with $122.9 million.

"We will go flying by that," said Chuck Viane, Disney head of distribution.

After 2003's acclaimed "Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl," reviews were mixed at best for both sequels.

Critics found the second and third movies more akin to the Disney theme-park attraction on which the franchise is based, cinematic thrill rides whose huge visual set pieces supplanted much of the charm of the first film, which earned Johnny Depp an Academy Award nomination as boozy buccaneer Jack Sparrow.

Released just 10 months after "Dead Man's Chest," the new movie picks up from that cliffhanger as Sparrow's friends and foes (Keira Knightley, Orlando Bloom and Geoffrey Rush) set sail to rescue him from Davy Jones' locker.

It remains to be seen how well "At World's End" will measure up in the long run to "Curse of the Black Pearl," which topped out at $305 million, and "Dead Man's Chest," last year's biggest hit with $423 million.

"Fifth-biggest opening of all time. There's really nothing to complain about here," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Media By Numbers. "These numbers tell us that people love to see these `Pirates' movies, regardless of reviews, regardless of any other factors."

With a big first weekend behind it, "At World's End" appears positioned to avoid the fate of some third installments such as "Jurassic Park III" and "The Matrix Revolutions," whose returns fell far short of their predecessors.

The new "Pirates" poached the box-office crown from DreamWorks Animation's "Shrek the Third," whose No. 1 debut a week earlier was a record opening for an animated film. "Shrek the Third" slipped to second place with $51 million, pushing its domestic total just beyond $200 million.

With $13.7 million, Sony's "Spider-Man 3" came in third, raising its domestic take to $303.3 million. Worldwide, "Spider-Man 3" has topped $800 million.

"At World's End" was hindered by a running time of two hours, 47 minutes, limiting the number of screenings theaters could schedule. "Dead Man's Chest" was about 15 minutes shorter and "Spider-Man 3" was nearly a half-hour shorter.

But "At World's End" made up for that by playing in more theaters, an all-time high of 4,362, 110 more than "Spider-Man 3," the previous record-holder.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released Tuesday.

1. "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End," $112.5 million.

2. "Shrek the Third," $51 million.

3. "Spider-Man 3," $13.7 million.

4. "Bug," $3.3 million.

5. "Waitress," $3.1 million.

6. "28 Weeks Later," $2.5 million.

7. "Georgia Rule," $1.9 million.

8. "Disturbia," $1.8 million.

9. "Wild Hogs," $1.1 million.

10. "Fracture," $1.08 million.

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by orlando_me May 29, 2007 5:39 PM EDT
I do not know what you are talking about. The movie was the best movie. I was sad, but come on it was not that bad. Orlando Bloom almost died in the movie and you say that the movie was bad. Also that they saved Jonny Deep but you still think that the movie was bad. then everybody who thinks that is wrong. nothing in the movie was bad.I t was just confussing that is all. YOU GUYS NEED TO GROW UP.
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by markbrookhar May 28, 2007 11:48 AM EDT
Pirates have really bad breath and stinky armpits. I could not help but imagine the "smell" of the characters in Dead Man's Chest. That pretty much spoiled it for me. The movie is nothing more than too much CG slashing- killing and stinky breathed pirates talking way to close to each other's noses. Naw, I'll pass on that. Even the girl wasn't pretty enough to want to watch it
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by galencbs May 28, 2007 10:52 AM EDT
I fought sleep the entire time and in the end didn't know why I bothered to stay awake. Endless and incoherent are the best things I can say about this "story". If you are into computer generated graphics that part was ok and at best the rest was a bore.
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by brianbwb-2009 May 28, 2007 7:54 AM EDT
To Hypnotoad72

I am not a homophobe at all, but I can't help but joke that, with the exaggerated posturing, and insertions of subtle "gay" jokes ("did I happen to mention that he's in love?...With a girl?" from potc2) Mr. Depp's character was so over-the-top camp, the urban definition might just be the booty the viewers tired of.

In "300", Leonidas makes reference to Athenians as "philosophers and boy lovers" and the two soldiers stacking dead Persians while joking about "offering your backside to the thespians", seems that a previously taboo side of humor is appearing in supposedly serious films, that was at one time just a staple of "camp" comedies. The problem will be explaining to your kids why it actually is so funny without offending gay folk...
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by brianbwb-2009 May 28, 2007 7:40 AM EDT
The first four films feature some pretty heavy CGI. The future is here, hire "motion actors" and avoid the big bux Schwarzenegger type salaries for the lucky few(read:connected)actors. Now Pixar, ILM, and the other CGI studios can take visual arts to new territories, comic book superheroes can have that extreme look their creaters dreamed of. Jack Kirby's imagination would be very welcome now. If only the Micro$oft monopoly's flagship product didn't SSSUCKKKK so much for any real a/v work, we might soon see some truly new imagination, as previously unknown imaginations that don't have megabudgets might become films.
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by hypnotoad72 May 27, 2007 11:37 PM EDT
People tired of Johnny Depp shakin' his booty? ROFL. (Booty meaning 'pirate treasure' and not the definition of high urban acclaim...)
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