May 29th, 2008 at 10:20 am

Nicolas Cage’s biggest movie yet came in at number one for both sales and rentals last week. ‘National Treasure: Book of Secrets’ grossed over $450 million at the worldwide box office and its grabbing a couple more million in stores now. It pushed last week’s top rental ‘Mad Money’ to the second place, which made another $6.1 million. ‘National Treasure: Book of Secrets’ took in an estimated $8.7 million.
But Disney’s adventure doesn’t end there. ‘National Treasure’ topped the Blu-ray and DVD sales charts too. ‘National Treasure: Book of Secrets’ was the number one Blu-ray, ‘National Treasure’ (the first movie) was number two and they shared the third place with a two-pack.
Indy also makes an appearance. The first three ‘Indiana Jones’ movies took the second to fourth place in the DVD chart. And I reckon most of the viewers went to the fourth installment after that.
May 23rd, 2008 at 6:30 pm

1. Narnia: Prince Caspian: $68,044,920 ($200 million budget)
2. Iron Man: $40,882,027 ($186 million budget, third week)
3. What Happens in Vegas: $18,788,250 ($35 million budget, second week)

Continue reading This week’s box office roundup
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Tags: box office, disney, indiana jones, iron man, kingdom of the crystal skull, prince caspian, speed racer, the chronicles of narnia, weekly roundup, what happens in vegas Posted in Box Office, News
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May 23rd, 2008 at 3:53 pm

Digital cinema is taking a big step in Europe. Yesterday we talked about how Sony Pictures’ new ‘Hot Ticket’ service will distribute digital content in the US, where about 5,000 screens are able to display the content. But in Europe, digital cinema equipment provider XDC has signed with four studios to deploy another 8,000 digital screens.
Earlier, the only choice for European theaters was to sign up with competitor Arts Alliance Media. But most theaters didn’t like the cost-sharing deal. This will give them a new choice. “The market needs some competition for exhibitors to see it as real. XDC has been around for a long time and now it has the credibility of studio product,” digital cinema analyst David Hancock said. But he noted how this step could also benefit Arts Alliance Media. “This is good news. [Arts Alliance] needed a competitor to make their offer more credible.“
XDC made the deal with Warner Bros, Twentieth Century Fox, Disney and Paramount, which will give them a lot more credibility. Yes, the digital revolution is everywhere. In ten years there will be no analog theaters left.
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Tags: 20th century fox, arts alliance media, david hancock, digital distribution, disney, europe, hot ticket, paramount, sony pictures, warner bros, xdc Posted in News
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