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Actors Amy Adams (L) and Patrick
Dempsey, stars of the film "Enchanted," pose at the film's premiere in
Hollywood, California Nov. 17, 2007.(Xinhua/Reuters
File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 25 (Xinhua) -- Disney's fairy-tale
romantic comedy "Enchanted" opened with an estimated 35.3 million U.S. dollars
at the top of box office in U.S. and Canadian theaters over the customary
three-day weekend period, according to preliminary figures released Sunday.
Meanwhile, the film's 50-million-dollar take over the
five-day Thanksgiving holiday period starting Wednesday gave it the
second-biggest Thanksgiving holiday opening in the history, just behind "Toy
Story 2" in 1999.
"Enchanted" tells a story about a cartoon princess
who is exiled from the fairyland to real-world New York and finds out new
meanings of life and love. The film pays tribute to many of Disney's classic
cartoon princesses like "Snow White," "Cinderella" and "Sleeping Beauty."
The extended holiday weekend box office period
started Wednesday and ended Sunday.
"This Christmas", a song-filled holiday flick from
Sony's Screen Gems, debuted in second place with 18.6 million dollars over the
three-day weekend and 27.1 million dollars over the five-day period.
Paramount's 3-D animated tale of "Beowulf," starring
Angelina Jolie, remained in the top tier at third place with 16.2 million
dollars over the three-day weekend after claiming the top spot last weekend. The
effects-rich film, which uses action-capture technology to render lifelike
images of actors, has taken in 56.4 million over two weeks.
"Hitman," a video-game adaptation released by 20th
Century Fox, debuted in fourth place with 13 million dollar over the weekend and
21 million dollar during the holiday period, followed by DreamWorks Animation's
"Bee Movie" in fifth with 12 million dollars.
The top-selling 12 films took in an estimated 218
million dollars in total ticket sales over the five-day holiday period, up 6
percent from that during the same period a year ago and helping reverse the
downtrend that Hollywood have seen in the past two
months.