Let's go over the ground rules. Rule number 1: No touching of the hair or face... AND THAT'S IT! | Photo courtesy of Lionsgate
As expected (due to its wussy PG-13 rating and higher theater count) The Forbidden Kingdom ($20.8M) knocked off the R-rated Forgetting Sarah Marshall ($17.3M) in the opening weekend for both films. Last week's dreary winner Prom Night endured the typical precipitous drop (-56%) but still managed to hold onto third place ($9.1M/$32.5M), well ahead of Al Pacino's latest piece of dreck, 88 Minutes ($6.8M). Hold-overs took the next four spots: the resilient Nim's Island ($5.6M/$32.8M), the essentially racist 21 ($5.5M/$69.9M), the guilty pleasure Street Kings ($4M/$19.8M) and the elephantine Horton Hears a Who! ($3.5M/$144.4M).
In a bit of a surprise, Ben Stein's conservative documentary Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed did reasonably good business in its debut ($3.1M). It edged the plummeting Leatherheads ($3.0M/$26.5M) which should vanish soon. The limited release crowd had a pretty brutal weekend. Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden made the most money, but it's per-theater average was abysmal ($1401). Pathology was even worse ($1086). Its dreadful performance should quickly consign Milo Ventimiglia back to the relative safety of television.




that forbidden kingdom movie is about 15 years past both of the actors respective primes...sarah marshall is great