Sandra Bullock tops box office after 10 years

The Walt Disney Co romantic comedy sold an estimated $34.1  million worth of tickets during the three-day period beginning  June 19, the company said yesterday.

“It definitely met and exceeded our expectations,” said Mark  Zoradi, president of Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Group.  “In a summer with a lot of sequels, it’s always nice to have an  original movie.”

“The Proposal” also earned $10 million from 10 foreign  markets, with No. 1 bows in Australia ($3.3 million) and Russia  ($2.8 million) leading the way.

Bullock last went to No. 1 in North America with the 1999 film  “Forces of Nature,” which co-starred Ben Affleck. Her previous  best opening was $17.6 million for her most recent film,  “Premonition,” in March 2007.

The 44-year-old actress stars as a book executive who fakes an  engagement to her lowly assistant (Ryan Reynolds) to avoid  deportation to her native Canada. The laughs ensue when she meets  his parents, with “Golden Girls” veteran Betty White stealing the  show. Anne Fletcher (“27 Dresses”) directed. Disney declined to  reveal the budget.
Critics’ reviews were mixed, but exit surveys were strong,  Disney said. Men accounted for 37 percent of the audience, a  surprisingly large turnout for a romantic comedy.

Its reign likely will be short-lived, though, with  “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” opening worldwide on  Wednesday through Viacom Inc’s Paramount Pictures.

After two weekends at No. 1, “The Hangover” slipped to No. 2  with $26.9 million. The hit bachelor-party comedy now has banked  $152.9 million, according to Time Warner Inc’s Warner Bros.  Pictures.

The only other new release in the top 10 was the Jack Black  prehistoric comedy “Year One,” which came in at No. 4 with $20.2  million, in line with the expectations of its distributor, Sony  Corp’s Columbia Pictures.

The $60 million film, from “Groundhog Day” director Harold  Ramis, stars Black and Michael Cera (“Juno”) as hunter-gatherers  banished from their primitive village.

Just ahead of it, at No. 3, was Disney’s Pixar-produced  cartoon “Up” with $21.3 million. It has earned $224.1 million  after four weekends, surpassing the $223.8 million lifetime total  of Pixar’s 2008 Oscar-winning smash “WALL-E.”

Zoradi said he expected “Up” to pass 2004’s “The Incredibles”  ($261 million) to become the second-biggest Pixar film after  2003’s “Finding Nemo” ($340 million). Comparative data are not  adjusted for inflation.

Rounding out the top five was Columbia’s “The Taking of Pelham  1 2 3” with $11.3 million. Denzel Washington and John Travolta  star in the hijacking thriller, which has earned $43.3 million  after 10 days.