LOS ANGELES -- Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill" saga slayed its movie rivals once again, with part two of the vengeance tale following its predecessor as the country's No. 1 weekend draw. "Kill Bill Vol. 2," with Uma Thurman as an ex-assassin continuing her bloody quest for revenge against former colleagues and lover, Bill, debuted with $25.6 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.\nThat was up 16 percent from the $22.1 million opening weekend that "Kill Bill Vol. 1" delivered last October. Part two is expected to match or exceed the $69.9 million domestic total of "Kill Bill Vol. 1," said Rick Sands, chief operating officer of Miramax, which released the movies.\nBy splitting "Kill Bill" into two parts, Tarantino and Miramax gambled that audiences would be willing to pay twice the ticket price to catch both chapters.The risk paid off nicely. The two movies cost a total of $60 million to produce, and "Kill Bill Vol. 1" alone has grossed $180 million worldwide, with the movie's video release last week selling 2 million copies in its first day, padding revenues by about $40 million more.\n"It was a terrific decision financially," Sands said.\nAnother tale of retribution, the comic-book adaptation "The Punisher," opened in second place with $14 million. The movie stars Thomas Jane as an ex--FBI agent targeting the crime boss, played by John Travolta, who wiped out his family.\n"A very big weekend for revenge," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. "Revenge in movies is very cinematic. Everyone lives vicariously through characters in movies, and they can safely get their revenge fix without actually doing it themselves."\nNia Vardalos, writer and star of the weekend's other big new release "Connie and Carla" was unable to recapture the box-office magic that made her first film, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding," a blockbuster.\n"Connie and Carla," a movie about two musical theater singers posing as men in a drag queen revue while hiding from mobsters, finished well out of the top 10 with $3.26 million. The movie co-stars Toni Collette and David Duchovny.\nVardalos' "Greek Wedding" debuted in 108 theaters two years ago with little fanfare, grossing $597,362 and averaging a solid $5,531 per cinema over opening weekend. Audience word-of-mouth gradually built the romantic comedy into a $241 million sensation. In contrast, "Connie and Carla" debuted in 1,014 theaters and averaged a weak $3,210. Studio polls found audience reaction was good for "Connie and Carla." Nikki Rocco, head of distribution for Universal, which released the movie, said she hopes the audience will have the same affect on "Connie and Carla" as it did on " My Big Fat Greek Wedding." \n"So I hope there's a little bit of life left in it," Rocco said. \nThe overall box office dipped slightly after seven straight weekends of rising revenue. The top 12 movies grossed $86.6 million, down 2 percent from the same weekend a year ago.\nAfter an Easter surge that lifted it back to the No. 1 spot the previous weekend, "The Passion of the Christ" fell to ninth place with $4.2 million. Since opening on Ash Wednesday, the movie has taken in $360.9 million domestically.\nDisney's expensive flop "The Alamo" came in at No. 10 with $4.05 million in its second weekend. "The Alamo" cost about $140 million to make and market but has grossed just $16.3 million.\nEstimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at North American theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations Co., Inc. Final figures will be released Monday.
Vengeance rules with 'Kill Bill' starting on top
'Punisher' opens in second spot with others lagging behind
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