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‘The Grudge’ grabs box office top spot

‘Surviving Christmas’ manages a ‘Gigli’-esque opening

Sarah Michelle Gellar stars in "The Grudge."
Columbia Pictures
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updated 6:23 p.m. ET Oct. 24, 2004

LOS ANGELES - Movie-goers hold no grudges against Sarah Michelle Gellar, but they apparently have a beef with Ben Affleck.

Gellar’s fright flick “The Grudge” got a jump on Halloween with a $40 million opening weekend to debut at No. 1, while Affleck delivered a holiday turkey with “Surviving Christmas,” his critically drubbed comedy that came in No. 7 with just $4.5 million.

The animated “Shark Tale,” the top movie for three straight weekends, slipped to second place with $14.3 million, lifting its total to $136.9 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

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“The Grudge,” a remake of a Japanese horror hit, stars Gellar as an American student in Tokyo terrorized by a raging spirit lingering in a house with a violent history.

Debuting in 3,245 theaters, “The Grudge” averaged a healthy $12,327 per cinema.

The movie marks the English-language debut for director Takashi Shimizu, who also made the Japanese original. “The Grudge” was produced by the horror outfit created by “Spider-Man” filmmaker Sam Raimi, who got his start with the cult fright flick “The Evil Dead.”

Audiences this time of year are in the mood for scary movies, but the big debut for “The Grudge” indicates it grabbed more than the usual Halloween crowd, said Rory Bruer, head of distribution for Sony, which released the movie.

“I would say that when you do $40 million, it’s got to be more than” the Halloween influence, Bruer said. “You have Sam Raimi, who’s got incredible knowledge of this genre. We had tremendous marketing, and Sarah Michelle Gellar, who was out there pounding the pavement, fighting for this film.”

  Box office results
Estimated ticket sales for Nov. 27-29

1. “The Twilight Saga: New Moon,” $42.5 million.
2. “The Blind Side,” $40.1 million.
3. “2012,” $18 million.
4. “Old Dogs,” $16.8 million.
5. “Disney’s A Christmas Carol,” $16 million.
6. “Ninja Assassin,” $13.1 million.
7. “Planet 51,” $10.2 million.
8. “Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ By Sapphire,” $7.1 million.
9. “Fantastic Mr. Fox,” $7 million.
10. “The Men Who Stare at Goats,” $1.5 million.

“Surviving Christmas” did barely better than Affleck’s notorious 2003 bomb “Gigli,” which had a $3.8 million opening weekend.

The movie stars Affleck as a lonely guy who hires a pretend family for the holidays. Critics trashed the movie, whose release was delayed a year to avoid bumping up against Affleck’s thriller “Paycheck” during the 2003 holiday season.

Executives at DreamWorks, which released “Surviving Christmas,” were unavailable for comment Sunday, a spokeswoman said.

Along with terrible reviews, “Surviving Christmas” may have been hurt by its October release date, unusually early for a yuletide movie.

“It is a little early, but people would accept Christmas in October if it had been a really good movie,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.

After three weeks in limited release, critical favorite “I (Heart) Huckabees” expanded nationwide and broke into the top 10 with $3 million.

Another darling of critics, the road-trip comedy “Sideways,” had a stellar debut in four New York City and Los Angeles theaters, grossing $208,293 to average $52,073. Directed by Alexander Payne (“About Schmidt”), “Sideways” stars Paul Giamatti as a loser in love on a bachelor spree at California wineries with a buddy who’s about to marry.

“The Machinist,” starring Christian Bale as a man coming unhinged after a year without sleep, also opened strongly in limited release with $64,000 in three New York City and Los Angeles theaters, averaging $21,333.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at North American theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures will be released Monday.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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