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Those of you who have been following along this year will know that the former film is Knocked Up, a movie that starred no one but rode a masterful marketing campaign to a $30.7 million opening. The aforementioned Rogen, who had worked with Apatow previously on Freaks and Geeks, Undeclared, Anchorman and The 40 Year-Old Virgin was the unlikely star. He played a schlub who had a chance romance with a pretty girl (Katherine Heigl) after meeting her at a bar. The result is that she becomes pregnant and the two try to give it a go as a couple. The movie was crass, vulgar and hilarious, and both audiences and critics adored it. By the end of its box office run, Knocked Up had earned an amazing $148.7 million and turned Rogen and Apatow into household names. The glorious year wasn't over for Apatow and Rogen, though. Superbad, which Apatow produced and Rogen wrote, followed two months later. Notably, Superbad had a trailer that ran in front of Knocked Up, giving audiences who were already primed for that exact sort of humor a taste of even more funny stuff to come. The stars of the film were again unknowns in Jonah Hill and Arrested Development's Michael Cera. And yet, somehow, some way, it opened even stronger than Knocked Up. Superbad earned $33.1 million in its opening weekend and went on to a final domestic tally of $121.5 million. I guarantee you that if you had asked any studio insider to tell you what Superbad's opening and final numbers would be in January of 2007, all you would have gotten would have been a funny look. Now, both Knocked Up and Superbad stand to be huge video hits as well, paving the way for future Apatow projects and his young cadre of stars. Yes, with Knocked Up and Superbad, Apatow was on top of the world. Entertainment Weekly named him #1 on their list of the 50 Smartest People in Hollywood, and Salon included him on its list of Sexiest Living Men. It wasn't all perfection, of course. Apatow's year ended on a bit of a down note as Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, for which he wrote the screenplay, was a flat-out bomb at the box office. Apatow won't be deterred, of course. He's involved as producer in a number of 2008 films, including the Owen Wilson starrer Drillbit Taylor, Pineapple Express, Forgetting Sarah Marshall and Will Ferrell's Step Brothers. Something notable about the first three projects is that all are written by Apatow protégés – Rogen on Drillbit Taylor and Pineapple Express, and Jason Segel on Forgetting Sarah Marshall. It seems certain that he'll continue to cultivate talented young performers and writers as his entourage grows. And in the future, when we see Apatow's name attached to a project, it won't be only us diehards that take notice.
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Thursday, October 31, 2024 © 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc. |