By Walid Habboub
Two thrillers are set to debut at theatres this weekend and one seems poised
to run away as the number one opener. The supernatural thriller
Dragonfly, starring Kevin Costner, will have a difficult time keeping up with
Anne Rice's Queen of the Damned, starring the late R&B singer/actress
Aaliyah. While both are aimed at a mostly adult audience, one will draw out
horror fans while the other looks to capitalize on a familiar formula.
Queen of the Damned has had some early buzz around it mainly due to the cult
following enjoyed by Anne Rice and her series of novels starring The Vampire
Lestat. A character last seen in the monster hit Interview With The Vampire,
Lestat has a large group of passionate followers who have been waiting for
this film with bated breath. But this passionate following is only one of
the reasons that this movie should do very well during its opening weekend.
The biggest story behind this movie is that it is Aaliyah's last role before
her untimely death and the media has been making the public very aware of
this fact. And while this in itself does not necessarily make someone want to see
the movie, it is definitely generating a lot of free advertising for Queen
of the Damned. Consequently, interest is very high within the
African-American community mostly due to Aaliyah's presence.
Horror movies in general are quite popular and always have the potential to
break out. For example, see Jeepers Creepers, a thoroughly eerie-looking
movie that had a creepy enough advertising campaign that it surprised almost
everyone at the box office. Not to say that all horror movies do well but
generally, well made and well-advertised ones have a large potential to
break out. The glossy, sexy look of Queen Of The Damned combined with a
healthy marketing push and high awareness will likely see it debut quite
strongly at the box office. ($17.5 million)
Dragonfly will have a more difficult time of it this weekend as it attempts
to battle uneven and confusing ads. The tone of the original trailer seems
to indicate a supernatural drama with a slight horror angle that could offer
a few frights; very Sixth Sense-ish, if you would. At the same time, some of the
TV ads are the kind of action-oriented ads that have very little action in
them. These are kinetic ads in which nothing exciting really happens. A good
example would be Vanilla Sky's advertising; an uneven schizophrenic ad
campaign that's not sure how to sell a film beyond the name brands attached
to it. Unfortunately for Dragonfly, the name brands it offers are less than
top grade.
This movie comes at an interesting time in Costner's career. He's been
knocking on the door of a comeback for a while now and he is still
remembered more by many for Dances with Wolves, Field of Dreams and JFK
than for Waterworld and The Postman. It is interesting that this movie has
drawn early comparisons to The Sixth Sense, seeing as how Bruce Willis was at
more or less the same point in his career in 1999 that Costner is now. Both
the tone of the film and apparently the storyline draw a lot of parallels to
the mega-hit, all the way down to the twist at the end, so it will be
interesting to see if this finally puts Costner over the hump. As unlikely
as that sounds, think of how likely it was that The Sixth Sense was going to
resurrect Bruce Willis' career the Thursday before it opened.
Such a dramatic effect still is unlikely to happen especially as early as
the opening weekend so I wouldn't expect Dragonfly to do runaway business right away. More likely, Dragonfly will see a modest debut with a
possibility of long term excellence. ($11 million)
View other columns by Walid Habboub