|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Mission: Impossible III opened on May 5, 2006 at an ultra wide 4,054 venues. The first weekend of May has often been considered a prime spot to open a summer blockbuster. It reached #1 with an opening weekend gross of $47.7 million. A good number, but one can’t help but draw comparisons, taking into account that the first Mission: Impossible opened to $45.4 million (back in 1996), and the second film opened to $57.8 million in 2000. Many were expecting the film to open above $50 million, with some even projecting an opening as high as $70 million. It finished its run at the US box office with $134 million, the lowest of the trilogy, for the first film earned $180.9 million, and the second film $215.4 million. Its overall worldwide box office stands at $397.8 million. Mission: Impossible finished with $457.6 million worldwide, while Mission: Impossible II accomplished an even higher $546.3 million worldwide. It was clear that audiences had left the franchise. In August 2006, Sumner Redstone, owner of Viacom (which comprises Paramount Pictures), cut ties with the production company Cruise/Wagner Productions, after he decided not to renew their contract with the studio. Since the first Mission: Impossible film, Cruise and his producing partner, Paula Wagner, had previously released all their films through Paramount. In an interview with Vanity Fair it appeared that Redstone’s wife, Paula Redstone, most likely influenced him after she heard Cruise’s comments regarding Brooke Shields. “Paula, like women everywhere, had come to hate him,” said Redstone. “The truth of the matter is, I did listen to her, but I make business decisions myself.” Redstone described how Cruise’s behavior was, “entirely unacceptable to [my wife,] Paula, and to the rest of the world. He didn't just turn one [woman] off. He turned off all women, and a lot of men. He was embarrassing the studio. And he was costing us a lot of money. We felt he cost us $100, $150 million on Mission: Impossible III. It was the best picture of the three, and it did the worst.” Cruise has also most likely damaged his career, for he has not had a film open to Mission: Impossible levels. Valkyrie opened to $21 million back in 2008, while the 2010 summer blockbuster Knight and Day disappointed by opening to $20.1 million. Ironically, Cruise’s next film is Mission: Impossible IV - Ghost Protocol. He is starring and producing, but his production company Cruise/Wagner Productions has nothing to do with the film. I viewed Mission: Impossible III on its opening day. My local multiplex had three prints of the film. I was a bit surprised that the screening I attended (in a large 400+ seat auditorium) was largely empty. I find myself agreeing with Redstone’s comments, in that the film is the best of the trilogy, even if only by a small margin. However, Cruise’s behavior during the last few years appears to have cost him and his films dearly. The true test of whether he can still bring in an audience will be answered with the release of Mission: Impossible IV.
[ View other columns by Shalimar Sahota ]
[ View other What Went Wrong columns ]
[ Email this column ]
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
Friday, November 1, 2024 © 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc. |