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REVIEW: Money, And Richard Gere, Fuel Fatalistic Financial Thriller Arbitrage

Billionaire Robert Miller ( Richard Gere ) is a cheat. He cheats on his wife ( Susan Sarandon ) with his mistress, and on his mistress (Laetitia Casta) with his job. And for his job as CEO of one of those mysteriously mighty hedge funds that control the world in Arbitrage , he’ll cheat everybody : the IRS, his daughter and business partner ( Brit Marling ), the buddy who loaned him $412 million, and the fellow mogul Miller wants to acquire his company so he can, of course, spend time with his family, even though the idea confuses them. “I’m just trying to imagine what we would do?” laughs Marling. Clearly, Robert Miller swims with those economic sharks who nearly ruined the world in 2008, and writer/director Nicholas Jarecki (brother of Andrew and Eugene) is going to make him pay. But not for his actual crimes — no one’s going to jail for those — which means Jarecki has to invent a new sin. And so, late one night when the roads are empty, Miller whisks his mistress toward his lake house. He falls asleep at the wheel, skids into the divider, and comes-to next to her fresh corpse — a bloody metaphor for the lives he’s impersonally ruined, and a vicious end for Casta, a Normandy-born beauty so physically perfect there’s literally a bust of her in every French town hall. The quiet of the crash’s aftermath is chilling; the only sound is Miller screaming. But then he thinks of the millions he could lose if the cops, investors, and his wife look harder at his life and makes the cold decision to abandon her body and rescue his reputation. Hey, what’s a little furtive involuntary manslaughter to the baron of Manhattan? With the overconfidence of someone who’s Tivo-ed every episode of CSI , Miller calmly calls collect to Harlem and asks his ex-chauffeur’s son, a young ex-con named Jimmy (Nate Parker), to meet him at a gas station and shuttle him back to the city, no questions asked. Meanwhile, Detective Bryer (Tim Roth) arrives at the flaming wreck and resolves to find out who was really behind the wheel. This sounds like the set-up of a cat-and-mouse thriller. But Jarecki quickly establishes that Miller is screwed — the detective has him fingered by breakfast, and by lunch he’s got Jimmy in custody and threatened with a 10-year sentence for obstruction of justice if he won’t give testimony proving Miller’s guilt. As Miller’s lawyer warns, “The real world is different than television.” So, too, is this movie. Compared to an episode of your average television procedural, Arbitrage has double the runtime and half the suspense because Jarecki could care less about tension and theatrics. He doesn’t even care about Casta’s death — she doesn’t merit a single emo flashback. Jarecki is only interested in one deeply cynical question: What justice is fair to a billionaire? Money — not sex or death — is what fuels Arbitrage . It’s Miller’s excuse for refusing to confess (what’s 10 years to one innocent man if it protects thousands of employees?), and it’s what Miller offers Jimmy for his silence. Apparently, the going rate for a decade of jail time is $2 million, an insulting number considering it’s also what Miller drops to squire Sarandon’s status-conscious wife to a single Friday night benefit gala. And the detective’s resentment for Miller’s practically meaningless money is why the pinched and bitter Roth is so dogged about putting him in prison, vowing, “He doesn’t get to walk just because he’s on CNBC .” The performances are golden with Marling, Roth and Sarandon adding heft to their slender characters. It’s smart casting to have Vanity Fair impresario Graydon Carter pop up as the tycoon Miller so desperately needs to impress. And as the under-attack Jimmy, Parker works hard to make audiences want to remember his name. But this is a showcase for Gere, who has spent his career playing men who can afford a good scotch. (With that head of expensive silver hair, he could never play a fry cook.) At 63, his features have turned to steel: his eyes are small and watchful, and with his good looks he seems aggressively aware that he only has a few more years to grope Laetitia Casta before he has to holster his penis like Harrison Ford. Here, he’s at once charismatic and clueless, even getting a laugh when he asks Jimmy, “What’s an Applebee’s?” Gere does his best to give Arbitrage an agitated energy, but Jarecki’s fatalism works against the film. We can’t root for Miller; instead, we watch with dispassionate interest how the fallout of his misdeeds affects his friends, business partners and family. The smart surprise is that frankly, some of them don’t give a damn. Miller’s millions haven’t just corrupted him — they’ve corrupted everyone who wants a piece of him. And when Jimmy, the poorest and the purest in this ice cold drama, growls, “You think money’s going to fix this?” we’re forced to agree with Miller’s genuinely confused response: “What else is there?” Amy Nicholson is a critic, playwright and editor. Her interests include hot dogs, standard poodles, Bruce Willis, and comedies about the utter futility of existence. Follow her on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Money, And Richard Gere, Fuel Fatalistic Financial Thriller Arbitrage

TRAILER: Jessica Chastain Stars In Guillermo Del Toro-Produced Horror Mama: Like Stepmom, With Ghosts?

Jessica Chastain ‘s had an incredibly good run of prestige films in the brief span of time that she’s been in Hollywood: Take Shelter , Coriolanus , Tree of Life , The Help , and this summer’s Lawless have made quite the highlight reel. So it was inevitable that the starlet would pop up in a horror film sooner or later. Might as well be a spooky one like the Guillermo Del Toro -executive produced Mama , right? Well — spooky, silly, horror movies tend to be both of those things these days and Mama , from first time feature director Andres Muschietti (adapting his own short film), doesn’t look to be terribly groundbreaking. Lucas ( Game of Thrones ‘ Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) and his girlfriend Annabel (Chastain) take in Lucas’s two young nieces, who are discovered living near-feral existences on their own in a desolate cabin in the woods for five years following their parents’ death. Adjusting to life with the adopted tykes isn’t so easy, though – Annabel begins to suspect that something sinister (“Mama!”) has followed them. And it probably doesn’t like seeing a new mommy tucking the kids in at night. Moody atmospherics, supernatural suspense, spider-crawling ghouls, Chastain with a black dye job and heavily-lined eyes at her very Gothiest… nothing seems all that original here. Despite Del Toro’s involvement and Chastain’s abilities, this is hitting theaters during the dumping grounds of January, so temper your expectations. Verdict: Looks like that Julia Roberts movie Stepmom , with ghosts. Meh. Mama is in theaters January 18. [Via Apple ]

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TRAILER: Jessica Chastain Stars In Guillermo Del Toro-Produced Horror Mama: Like Stepmom, With Ghosts?

Reacting to Re-Enactment: Which Toronto Documentaries Use The Controversial Technique Well − Which Don’t

Just a couple of days into the Toronto International Film Festival this year,  a curious commonality was noticeable in a number of the documentaries that I screened – re-enactments. While I only managed to see just under half of the nearly 50 documentary features in the TIFF line-up , it  was surprising to see the storytelling approach — where significant past events are recreated via actors and, sometimes, animation — relatively widely employed. While some notable non-fiction films have made effective use of the practice — such as The Imposter or The Thin Blue Line — re-enactments more often feel in line with television productions of the Unsolved Mysteries variety.  They remain a controversial element of documentary making, potentially challenging a film’s authenticity by introducing an outside, fictional element. It’s significant that the practice of re-enactment is the singular focus of one of the festival’s most-discussed docs, The Act of Killing , making this challenging film an appropriate place to begin. Director Joshua Oppenheimer, together with Christine Cynn and other anonymous co-directors, turn Indonesian gangsters into would-be Hollywood stars. The former death-squad leaders, responsible for the massacre of more than a million undesirables in 1965-1966, gleefully go along with Oppenheimer’s unusual plan, re-enacting the techniques they used to torture and murder suspected Communists, from off-the-cuff demonstrations of the cleanest way to strangle a victim to more elaborate set pieces involving interrogations and the destruction of a village. Verisimilitude is not the intent here. Although these over-the-top re-enactments push the limits of documentary ethics, they also shed light on the outsized personalities of the main subjects and reveal their histories and character. This conflation of a horrific reality with stylized fantasy also challenges the viewer and the perpetrators and becomes an unexpected form of therapy for the latter group. Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God More literal examples of re-enactments are present in Alex Gibney’s Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God , the prolific Oscar-winner’s exploration of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests. Focused around a Milwaukee priest who abused countless boys at the deaf school he ran, the film features the American Sign Language testimony of a number of men, spoken aloud by the likes of Ethan Hawke and John Slattery, but not distractingly so. Despite the forcefulness of the now-grown victims’ anger, expressed via their demonstrative signing and reinforced by the actors’ delivery (itself a form of re-enactment), Gibney decides to go one step further, recreating key sequences from their stories: silent scenes in which the priest prowls through the dorms ready to pounce on a sleeping young boy, or abuses the sanctity of the confessional booth. These sequences lack in subtlety and while they don’t undermine the strength of the film as a whole, they seem entirely superfluous. [ Editor’s Note: Gibney talks about his reasons for using these re-enactment sequences in an upcoming Movieline interview. ] Even more conventional is the use of re-enactments in Janet Tobias’ N o Place On Earth , the story of Ukrainian Jews who spent nearly a year and half living, literally, in caves to avoid capture during World War II. The majority of the film consists of actors portraying the circumstances of their flight from persecution and the conditions of their underground existence. Still-living survivors offer commentary in intermittent talking-head sequences, but the intended weight of the film is in the re-enactments which at times break from simply illustrating the story to feature actual scripted sequences. In the process, No Place on Earth ventures a step too far into docudrama. Given that the film is a production of the History Channel, it will likely connect with TV viewers, but, personally, scenes with the survivors re-visiting their cave sanctuary late in the film carried far more emotional resonance than the recreations.

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Reacting to Re-Enactment: Which Toronto Documentaries Use The Controversial Technique Well − Which Don’t

Lizzy Caplan and Adam Scott Talk Reuniting in Bachelorette, Spill Party Down Movie Details

Lizzy Caplan and Adam Scott haven’t hung up their pink bow ties just yet. Although cult hit Party Down has been off the air for two years, fans of the show split their time between making Party Downton ( Party Down + Downton Abbey ) memes and petitioning for a film. And while there have been mini-reunions on Children’s Hospital and web series Burning Love , none compare to Lizzy Caplan and Adam Scott’s team-up as feuding former couple, Gena and Clyde, in Bachelorette , in limited release now. Movieline chatted with the reunited pair, discovering that Caplan basically wrote Scott’s character into the film, and what the duo thinks Henry and Casey (their Party Down counterparts) are doing at this very second. Bachelorette originated as a Leslye Headland’s off-Broadway play, and you had worked with her before, Lizzy. Did you get Adam on board? LIZZY CAPLAN: [Adam and I] saw the play together because me and Jessica Elbaum, one of the producers of Bachelorette , hired Leslye to write a pilot for us. And so we were all in New York and we went to check it out. And then about a year later, we found out they were doing this movie. Adam’s character is not in the play, but I said he would be opposite me and it would really help me out if my buddy could join me and make me look good on camera. And he said yes! Did you actually craft the character of Clyde for him, or did you two collaborate? CAPLAN: No. It was in the feature version always, but I think everybody was allowed to bring their own flavor to it. It felt like you two were the heart of the movie. Do you think your history made it easier to convey Gena and Clyde’s chemistry and relationship in general? CAPLAN: I remember talking to Leslye about how… I mean, every year, the fan base for Party Down grows, so when we started shooting this movie, we were starting to get sort of this cult following. So for this segment of the population, seeing the two of us on screen, you just get that added history without us having to do anything. But a lot of people still haven’t seen Party Down , so, I don’t think it’s going to piss too many people off. I think people are most excited to see us on screen together because they still feel like they’re in this little tiny insular secret club that knows about Party Down . Megan Mullally spilled the beans about the status of the Party Down movie, claiming you aim to start filming early next spring. Do you have any updates? ADAM SCOTT: You know, we’re all just crossing our fingers that it will start… anytime? I don’t know about spring or summer, but that would be great! We’re all just kind of crossing our fingers and hoping that at some point we’ll make the movie. But there’s no news as of right now. Where do you imagine Henry and Casey are now? Would they be anything like your characters in Bachelorette ? CAPLAN: Well, hopefully they wouldn’t be anything like our characters in Bachelorette . They have a happy ending, kind of! CAPLAN: Yeah, I guess they do. But when I think about the next day after Bachelorette , I don’t know what happens to these two people. I don’t really see them making it work necessarily — they’re both too screwed up. And with the [ Party Down ] movie, I mean, the thing with our relationship in that show is that you could have us together, like in the first season, or you could have us apart for the first few bits of it like in the second season, and it sort of always works. So I don’t even really have a preference there. SCOTT: I don’t know! It’s up to John Enbom and Dan Etheridge and Rob Thomas, the guys that write the show. Whatever they come up with is usually sort of the best way to go. I actually think about it probably more than I should because they are fictional characters that do not exist, but I think of them a lot. What do you think they’re doing right now? SCOTT: Hmm… I wonder what they’re doing right now… CAPLAN: Napping. SCOTT: Napping. They’re always napping. CAPLAN: They’re napping. SCOTT: I think that if there’s ever a Party Down movie, everyone else will be catering, and Henry and Casey will be napping. CAPLAN: I think that works. I think maybe you could sprinkle three to four naps in one feature film! SCOTT: It could be great! Adam was on Burning Love , but Lizzy, you were one of the only former cast members who didn’t pop in… CAPLAN: I think they’re doing another season of that, and they know like I’m soooo down to do it. I don’t know what I was doing at the time — you’ll have to ask Ken ‘ASSHOLE’ Marino about that. Would you two like to keep doing films together even if this Party Down thing doesn’t happen for a couple of years? SCOTT: Ugh! [Scoffs] CAPLAN: [Laughs] think we are both fans of working together, and we try to give it a little time between projects so people aren’t sick of us. Or Adam. So people aren’t sick of Adam. SCOTT: Um, yeah. I… I don’t know. I thought I liked working with Lizzy, and then we did this movie and it was just like, ugh . [Feigns disgust] Shut up! Just SHUT UP! CAPLAN: Well, somebody’s got to talk. You would not believe how quiet this man can get and for how long he can do it for. SCOTT: Ugh! [Feigns disgust again] CAPLAN: You’d probably get to ask like two or three questions if Adam wasn’t on the other phone right now, because, Jesus! SCOTT: But that all being said, yeah. If Lizzy could be in everything that I do, I would be all the better for it. So, hopefully we can do lots of other stuff. CAPLAN: What a nice guy. Oh, he’s going to come across as so sweet in this interview. SCOTT: Incorrect. That is not the thing! But honestly, congrats to both of you — Bachelorette held steady as the #1 rental on iTunes up until its release. Do you think it will make more people go see it in theaters or do you think more will see it at home? CAPLAN: It will be interesting to see. I think everybody’s kind of waiting to see the answer to that question — if this dissuades people from going to the theater or not. But if you’re going to release something on Video On Demand, you want it to be number one! So we’re all pretty happy about it. SCOTT: I think it will help with theatrical. You know, it basically serves as a really, really great marketing tool … It kind of just appeared on iTunes and On Demand and did really, really well. So I think all it shows is that there’s a lot of interest for it, [and] I feel like it will do really well. CAPLAN: I’m seeing people tweeting and stuff about how they watch it more than one time. And it’s a much different experience to see a comedy in your house than it is to see it in an auditorium full of people. So I’m hoping people want to have that experience. SCOTT: An auditorium? Are people seeing movies in auditoriums? CAPLAN: I tend to watch my movies in church basement auditoriums. SCOTT: I like ’em in cafeterias. CAPLAN: Oh, you do? I didn’t know that about you! So much more cool. I think they’re broadcasting Bachelorette in public now — in Central Park. That’s where it will go next. I think it’s a great movie for kids to see outside!This movie is a great influence on kids, after all. CAPLAN: I totally agree. I’m gonna put a call in right after we finish up here about showing it to children in a park. Adam, you have kids, so you should show it to them really soon. CAPLAN: Take ’em to the park, Adam, and show them the movie! SCOTT: I think it would be great to show this movie to small children. It’s perfect for them. Bachelorette is in limited theaters. Alyse Whitney is an editor at Wetpaint Entertainment in New York City. Her work has been featured on TVLine, Movieline, and Bon Appétit, among others. You can find her on Twitter at @AlyseWhitney .

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Lizzy Caplan and Adam Scott Talk Reuniting in Bachelorette, Spill Party Down Movie Details

Fair Or Far-Fetched? Towson University Students Look To Establish ‘White Student Union’

With Black Student Unions all over the counrty, should white students to be allowed have one too? Towson University Students Rallying For ‘White Student Union’ A Towson University student is arguing that if black students can come together and celebrate their heritage and history, white students should be able to do the same. The student, who has also gathered support from his peers, is proposing the establishment of a ‘White Student Union’ on campus. A Towson University student wants to start a ‘White Student Union’ on the campus. Matthew Heimbach said that he is gathering support from other students who support the idea of the organization. The controversial idea was published in the University’s newspaper, where Heimbach alluded that the purpose of the organization is to replicate other student union organizations on campus by giving white students the same avenue to appreciate their history and heritage. Students and professors balked at the idea of divisive ‘white only’ proposed organization on campus. One student said, “We had to congregate together because we weren’t allowed to congregate with whites. There is a difference between a White Student Union and a Black Student Union based on the history of America.” According to reports for CBS Baltimore, Heimbach was also previously involved with an organization called Youth for Western Civilization, a group that caused uproar when messages of white pride were written across the Maryland campus. Richard Vatz is a communications professor at Towson University and a former adviser of the Youth for Western Civilization, who had this to say: “When you have a group that calls themselves the White Student Union, their only purpose is generally hostility towards those who are non-white.” What say you Bossip readers? Is it fair to deny these students the right to form this organization? How do you think a White Student Union would differ from a Black Student Union? Source

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Fair Or Far-Fetched? Towson University Students Look To Establish ‘White Student Union’

Early Reviews: Is Cloud Atlas A Triumph Or A Disaster (Or Both)?

“Everything is connected,” reads the tagline for Cloud Atlas . As it is with life and the history of time and humanity, so it is with film reviews; sharply divided reactions have been coming out of Toronto, where the ambitious, history-spanning epic had its world premiere. Seldom do movies garner such polarizing critical reads: Is Cloud Atlas a triumph of ambition or, as one critic spat, ” a unique and totally unparalleled disaster ?” [ PHOTOS: First Images From The Wachowskis’ Cloud Atlas ] That biting reaction comes courtesy of The House Next Door ‘s Calum Marsh ( full review here ), whose beefs — and there are many — range from technical shortcomings to wider structural issues… which, in the case of a film about human interconnectivity and spirit, which interweaves six disparate storylines set in different eras that are filmed in varying tones and genres and feature the same actors in multiple characters (and, sometimes, in yellow- and white- and whatever-face), can be a problem: “‘What is an ocean,’ one character asks smugly, ‘if not a multitude of drops?’ And what’s Cloud Atlas if not a multitude of terrible details and unwatchable moments? The problem isn’t that this is one of the worst films I’ve ever seen in my life; the problem is that it’s seven of the worst films I’ve ever seen in my life glued together haphazardly, their inexorable badness amplified by their awkward juxtaposition. Tom Tykwer and Andy and Lana Wachowski wanted to make a movie unlike any other, and they certainly did: Cloud Atlas is a unique and totally unparalleled disaster.” But one critic’s disaster is another’s transcendent cinematic opus. Devin Faraci, reviewing in Badass Digest ( full review here ), gives high marks to Lana Wachowski, Andy Wachowski, and Tom Tykwer’s reach as scripters and co-directors, arguing that while imperfect, Cloud Atlas is “one of the great pictures of the 21st century so far”: ” Cloud Atlas is sometimes silly, and it’s sometimes pretentious and it’s sometimes overstuffed. But every single one of those things, to me, is a positive. It’s an exceptional piece of filmmaking, one of the bravest works I have ever seen. The Wachowskis have followed the poorly received final two Matrix films and the bomb of Speed Racer with a three hour meditation on the nature of human interaction, featuring a few actors in many make-ups. Some may see that as self-destructive, but I see it as incredibly heroic.” Most early reviews thus far fall at various points between Marsh and Faraci ( Cloud Atlas is currently at 60 percent on Rotten Tomatoes with 10 reviews counted * ). That’s not too surprising, given the difficulty of the undertaking at hand; adapting David Mitchell’s 500+ page novel into their own structure, no less, can be a tricky feat; doing so while pushing a sentimental theme, even moreso. Critics may agree on how the parts fit, but whether or not they see the larger picture congealing is another story. Cloud Atlas jumps around from narrative to narrative, from an 18th century sea voyage to 1970s San Francisco to the dystopian “Neo Soul” future and beyond. At least it has stars Tom Hanks and Halle Berry, who appear in multiple characters throughout, to lend some star wattage. (Jim Broadbent, Jim Sturgess, Hugh Jackman, Ben Whishaw, Doona Bae, Susan Sarandon, and Hugo Weaving fill out the cast.) Did I mention it’s three hours long? The strange thing about these early reviews is that I’m inclined to believe them all. Both sides of the coin: Triumph and, perhaps, disaster. (Then again, I loved Speed Racer . That turned out to be both at once.) * The film’s Tomatometer rating is now up to 73 percent with 15 total reviews, 11 fresh and 4 rotten. Goes to show how quickly the tide can shift so early on. We’ll be keeping an eye on the critical reaction as it builds toward week of release . Stay tuned for more on Cloud Atlas , in theaters October 26, and catch up on Movieline’s coverage of the Toronto Film Festival. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Early Reviews: Is Cloud Atlas A Triumph Or A Disaster (Or Both)?

Octomom "Sexy Party" Single Sneak Peek: Listen, Laugh Out Loud Now!

Looks like Farrah Abraham’s “On My Own” has some competition for worst song released in the past week … or in the history of human civilization. Octomom Nadya Suleman – yes, Octomom is RECORDING MUSIC now – has a new dance track entitled “Sexy Party” coming out in the near future. The 30-second sneak peek below, which TMZ first posted, is rather amazing, as it features Octo counting in Spanish and plugging her payday loan site . WARNING: May cause sudden vomiting and/or uncontrollable laughter.

Jennie Garth: Very Thin, Struggling at Dating

It’s been less than five months since Peter Facinelli and Jennie Garth split after 11 years of marriage, but she already looks quite a lot different. Noticeably slimmer , to be more specific. On a media tour in NYC August 7, Garth, 40, is discussing life as a single mom of three, as chronicled on CMT’s Jennie Garth: A Little Bit County . Jennie Garth yesterday (left), and in 2010 . “I always said I would rather lick a dirty floor than go back to dating,” Garth said. “[Dating] is very new for me. I have training wheels on right now.” “I was married [for so long]. That’s my whole adult life, basically. I think I’m actually going back into adult adolescence. I’m having a moment.” Garth, who has been linked to HGTV’s Antonio Ballatore, said that she’s “met a few people of the opposite sex” but is finding it hard to date again. “They come into it knowing who I am or my history,” the actress opined. “While I know nothing about them, so I have a weird disadvantage.” [Photos: WENN.com, Pacific Coast News]

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Jennie Garth: Very Thin, Struggling at Dating

Usain Bolt vs. The Field: Who Won the 100 Meters?

It’s arguably the most anticipated event of every Summer Olympics, and the London 2012 edition did not disappoint. With 2008 Gold Medal honoree and world record holder Usain Bolt looking to stave off competition from countryman Yohan Blake and U.S. sprinter Justin Gatlin, who came out on top of today’s 100-meter dash? BOLT! The reigning Olympic champion went back-to-back, setting a blistering pace and also an Olympic record with a ridiculous time of 9.63 seconds. Blake came in second at 9.75 seconds and Gatlin earned Bronze with a time of 9.79. The Fastest Man in the History of the World will next compete in the 200 meters. Get your popcorn ready, people.

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Usain Bolt vs. The Field: Who Won the 100 Meters?

Ice Age Freezes Spider-Man: Weekend Receipts

The last pre- Dark Knight Rises weekend at the multiplex came and went without much incident, unless you call The Amazing Spider-Man losing his grip on the No. 1 spot after one week an “incident.” You decide! Either way, your Weekend Receipts are here. 1. Ice Age: Continental Drift Gross: $46,000,000 (new) Screens: 3,881 (PSA: $11,853) Weeks: 1 The Ice Age franchise celebrated its 10th anniversary by rolling its opening-weekend domestic gross back to 2002 prices — the fourth installment of the series earned almost precisely what the original earned out of gate a decade ago. It still amounts to only the third highest opening of the series, but Fox will take it (not to mention deposing one-week wonder The Amazing Spider-Man for No. 1). 2. The Amazing Spider-Man Gross: $35,000,000 ($200,900,000) Screens: 4,318 (PSA $8,106) Weeks: 2 (Change: -43.6%) It took 11 days — including a holiday — for Sony’s comics reboot to hit the $200 million mark domestically. That’s fine and all, but in the summer of The Avengers and mere days ahead of the Dark Knight Rises megastorm that will wipe Spider-Man off the map, it’s not really good enough, is it? 3. Ted Gross: $22,147,000 ($158,993,000) Screens: 3,303 (PSA: $6,705) Weeks: 3 (Change: -31.2%) Time and time again over the last few weeks, the one conversation that seems to come up among me and people whose taste I generally trust involves the title Ted and the phrase, “It was better than I expected.” If its box-office hold after three weeks is any indication, I am not the only one having this conversation. 4. Brave Gross: $10,695,000 ($195,596,000) Screens: 3,392 (PSA $3,153) Weeks: 4 (Change: -45.5%) Another reasonably good hold here, though what’s really worth watching is how the overseas grosses start to mount over the next two months of foreign rollouts . The slowest of slow burns — Brave indeed! 5. Magic Mike Gross: $9,030,000 ($91,850,000) Screens: 3,090 (PSA $2,922) Weeks: 3 (Change: -42.3%) Yeah, I’d say a sequel might be worth a try. [Figures via Box Office Mojo ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Ice Age Freezes Spider-Man: Weekend Receipts