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    Review: The Happening (DVD)


    2008 - 11.30

    Following the miscue with Lady In the Water and the disappointing The Village, M. Night Shyamalan needed a bounce-back movie that proved he could still create effective cinema. While The Happening may not be a complete vindication, it is a step in the right direction toward re-establishing himself has an effective thriller and suspense director.

    The Happening is also noteworthy in that it is the first R-rated feature Shyamalan has ever made. While The Happening is an R, it places its use of those freedoms appropriately into cinematic intensity, rather than needless excesses.

    The opening sequence is a perfect example of this judicious lack of restraint; two female friends are talking in a city park; one of them stops mid-sentence, repeats herself and then, as her friend is reacting to some off-screen horror, she withdraws a knitting-needle-like hairpin from her hair, places the point of it at her own neck as her friend turns back to see what she is doing, and then begins – slowly – to plunge the needle into her own neck.

    What makes the film an R is not a bunch of frivolous nudity or a huge, gory gunfight, but simply the fact that Shyamalan allows his camera to linger a bit longer on the horror unfolding on-screen. In a PG-13 cut of the film, we would have seen the needle poised at her neck, then cut away to a close-up of her friend screaming; in the R-rated edit, we see the needle pierce the neck.

    That’s the difference and even in this excess, Shyamalan shows judicious restraint, using the lingering camera just long enough to amp up the suspense and growing sense of horror, but not indulging in the gore for too long as to blunt its shock value in the way a teen slasher movie might.

    The DVD release follows a rather successful run at the box office; The Happening made $64 million domestically and $163 million in worldwide box office, against a modest, $48 million budget. That’s a huge improvement over Lady In the Water, which made only $42 million domestically and $72 million worldwide against a production budget of $70 million. The Village was extremely successful at the box office and only a critical failure, drawing $256 million worldwide in box office against a $60 million budget.

    So, while The Happening made money, which is an improvement, Shyamalan still has a ways to go before it can be said that he’s mended fences with moviegoers enough to draw them back in at the level he did with such films as The Sixth Sense, Unbreakable, Signs and, yes, the disappointing but high-grossing The Village.

    There is a satisfying number of special features included on the DVD release, including several mini-documentaries that go into detail on the behind-the-scenes stuff and about the only thing they don’t discuss is whether they used Cisco routers for their Internet connections on the set.

    The only real complaint here is the lack of a decent commentary track; hearing M. Night, Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel dish on the production would have added to the enjoyment. Other than that, The Happening is a solid DVD release that delivers the goods better than any movie Shyamalan has helmed since Signs.

    Four Christmases rallies to beat Twilight, Bolt


    2008 - 11.30

    The holiday-themed comedy Four Christmases started out somewhat weak against box office holdovers Twilight and Bolt, but by the end of the weekend, it was the newcomer at the top of the holiday heap. Four Christmases, which cost $80 million to make, dragged in $31.6 million over the three-day weekend and $46.7 million over the five-day weekend including Thanksgiving.

    By comparison, Twilight faded two third place, losing ground not only to Four Christmases, but also to Bolt. Twilight grossed $26.3 million over the three-day weekend, compared to $26.5 million for Bolt, as part of a photo-finish for second place. Even so, Twilight stands out as the big winner, grossing $119 million over its first 10 days of release, against a $37 million production budget.

    The money-making vampire romance is still hot enough to make mechanics forget about coilovers and contemplate taking their girlfriends out for a movie and a meal.

    James Bond added $19.5 million to its US take, good enough to secure fourth place, but Australia managed only fifth place with $14.8 million, with Madagascar 2 breathing down its neck with $14.5 million. Transporter 3 debuted in seventh place with a $12.3 million bow, and nothing else came close.

    The Thankful Dead


    2008 - 11.27

    Romantic vampires are all the rage right now. Not only has HBO found a hit in Alan Ball’s adaptation of Charlaine Harris’ Sookie Stackhouse supernatural mystery novels, True Blood, but the big-screen adaptation of Stephanie Meyer’s four-book epic, Twilight, which is the first of the four installments, was dominant at the box office both last weekend and heading into the Thanksgiving holiday.

    Twilight grossed just under $70 million in domestic box office over its first three days, despite a lack of established stars and a modest $37 million budget. On Thanksgiving Thursday, the movie started strong, with $8 million, enough to keep it ahead of all comers.

    Quantum of Solace, the strong new Bond thriller with a bulky $200 million budget, dropped to third place on Thanksgiving, behind Four Christmases. The critically-acclaimed Australia opened in seventh place over the weekend and keeps fading. Considering Twilight is a no-sex, no-violence, no stars wunderkind, it is certainly the surprise of the Thanksgiving box office. Hollywood could probably use a memory upgrade to keep in mind the lessons learned here.

    Start the mourning now: Monk ending


    2008 - 11.17

    While USA renewed MONK this week for an eighth season, the network also revealed it will mark the final bow for the Tony Shaloub-helmed dramedy. Shaloub has played the obsessive-compulsive detective long enough to make up for being part of NBC’s Wings, which is saying something.

    Monk has always been a series on diet pills, producing only 16 episodes per season, and this final season, which begins next summer, in June, will be the same. That’s just as Shaloub and company would have it.

    All the key players are still in place for the final season of Monk, including Traylor Howard as Monk’s assistant, Natalie Teeger. No word yet on whether producers will mend fences and bring back Bitty Schram for one final bow as Monk’s original assistant, Sharona Fleming, but one can only hope.

    Bond Dominates!


    2008 - 11.17

    It wasn’t even close.

    007 James Bond: Quantum of Solace, the follow up to Daniel Craig’s debut as Bond, 2006’s Casino Royale, opened appropriately large this weekend, taking in an estimated $70.4 million in the US alone, with an additional $251 million worldwide to date, accounting for a total of $322 million worldwide, against a production budget of $200 million.

    The PG-13 rating helped.

    Coming in second was Madagascar 2: Escape 2 Africa, which added $36.1 million in its second weekend, making its 10-day take $118 million against a $150 million budget for the animated feature. Third was role models with $11.7 million, and then there was a big dropoff as High School Musical 3: Senior Year added $5.8 million and Changeling $4.2 million to round out the top five films in weak fashion.

    Perhaps it’s the comfort of home theater seating that is keeping crowds away from the box office, or perhaps it’s just not holiday season quite yet.

    Things are expected to pick up a bit next weekend as Bolt will add more PG kids fare to the mix, while Twilight will add some vampire romance to the last pre-Thanksgiving box office weekend of the year.

    Where’s Harry Potter when you need him?

    High School Musical 3 earns extended run


    2008 - 11.02

    While stock experts may prefer to monitor Tonalin CLA, HollywoodIdiocy.com is all about the weekend box office, and the much-hyped High School Musical 3 earned and extended run atop the box office this past weekend. Tops now for two weeks in a row, the sprightly live action film musical earned $15 million in its second weekend of release, bringing its to-date total to $61.7 million against an $11 million budget.

    The controversial sex comedy, Zack and Miri Make a Porno, debuted strongly enough to earn second place, raking in $10.6 million in its opening bow, while Saw V fell to third place on Halloween weekend with $10.1 million.

    Changeling showed marked improvement in its first week of full release, drawing $9.4 million to bring its running total to $10 million. And a strong showing by The Haunting of Molly Hartley, a Halloween spooker, finally dethroned the comeback of the Taco Bell dog movie, Beverly Hills Chihuahua. Haunting drew $6 million to BHC’s $4.7 million.