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Monday, May 6
The Indiana Daily Student

arts

Horror flick tops box office

LOS ANGELES -- Horror held sway at theaters again as "Jeepers Creepers 2" sunk its claws into audiences, debuting as the top movie with $18.5 million over the long Labor Day weekend.\n"Jeepers Creepers 2" deposed another horror sequel, "Freddy vs. Jason," which had been the No. 1 movie for the previous two weekends. "Freddy vs. Jason" fell to No. 6 with $8.1 million, bringing its 17-day total to $73.4 million, according to industry estimates Monday.\nHollywood had a brisk finish to the summer-blockbuster season, with revenues up for the third straight weekend. The top 12 movies took in $101.2 million over Labor Day weekend, an 11 percent increase over the same period last year.\nThe industry rang up $3.87 billion in ticket sales domestically from early May through Labor Day, beating summer 2002's revenue record by about 2 percent. Factoring in higher admission prices this year, though, the number of tickets sold fell about 2 percent.\nRevenues had slumped during the first half of summer, but a strong lineup of late-season hits helped Hollywood catch up to summer 2002's pace.\n"It was a very impressive finish," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. "Summers are known for burning out or faltering at the end, but this summer certainly bucked that trend with some pretty strong films."\nA follow-up to 2001's horror mini-hit, "Jeepers Creepers 2" features the return of the bestial, bat-like "Creeper," this time butchering and munching on a bus full of high school athletes and cheerleaders.\n"Jeepers Creepers 2" was the only new film in wide release for Labor Day weekend, traditionally a quiet time at theaters when families are preoccupied with barbecues and other outdoor activities and students are preparing to return to school.\nArthouse films in limited release expanded to eager audiences. "American Splendor," starring Paul Giamatti as cult comic-book writer Harvey Pekar, widened to 88 theaters and took in a healthy $1.08 million.\nFour movies passed $100 million over the weekend, bringing summer's total to 15 flicks hitting that mark, breaking summer 2002's record of 13.\nCrossing $100 million were "S.W.A.T.", "Seabiscuit," "The Italian Job" and "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle." At least two other movies released this summer are positioned to top $100 million.

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