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Three Reasons To See 'The Hobbit' That Have Nothing To Do With The Film

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The Hobbit

Peter Jackson's long-awaited film "The Hobbit" is finally in theaters today.

If you're not completely sold on the "Lord of the Rings" prequel, there are other reasons to head to theaters:

1. The Previews

Not only will the new "Man of Steel" trailer air (which will look and sound more epic on the big screen), but "Star Trek" fans can also look forward to the first full trailer from next summer's "Into Darkness."

2. The First Nine Minutes of "Star Trek: Into Darkness"

Technically, you can watch the previews online; however, only about 500 IMAX theaters will show the first few minutes of next year's "Star Trek" sequel ahead of the film.

(Here's a full list of theaters showing the extended preview.)

3. Eye-popping 48 Frames Per Second

"The Hobbit" will be the first film to experiment with showing a movie at an unprecedented 48 frames per second.

Normally, films are shown at half that rate, 24 frames per second. We're hoping the effect isn't a brutal assault on our brains and eyeballs and will just deliver a crisper, sharper image.

SEE ALSO: James Cameron swears "Avatar" was completely his idea ... but then admits it's a retelling of "Pocahontas">

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"The Hobbit" earned a huge $13 million l

James Cameron Almost Made A Film Called 'E.T.' Before Steven Spielberg

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James Cameron E.T.

James Cameron almost worked on a film called "E.T."

While going through Cameron's 45-page sworn declaration defending his ownership of the "Avatar" property, the director revealed he had the idea to write a film of the same name as Steven Spielberg's 1982 hit.

"In 1980 or 1981, I wrote notes and an initial treatment for a science fiction story that I initially called “E.T.,” meaning extraterrestrial, a commonly used term in science fiction literature. As I was writing it, I found out that Steven Spielberg was making a film called “E.T. The Extraterrestrial,” so I promptly changed the title of my story."

The film would have been far from the extraterrestrial tale we know today. 

According to Cameron, his "E.T." would have followed humans in search of resources on another planet after Earth became all but inhabitable.

Spielberg's version quickly prompted Cameron to change the title of his film to "Mother."

Though the film never made it past the initial writing stages, it did serve as partial inspiration for Cameron's "Avatar."

This isn't the first time Cameron nearly bested Spielberg on the rights to the same film. 

In another odd coincidence, Cameron also considered bringing the adaptation of Michael Crichton's "Jurassic Park" to the big screen, too.

In September, Cameron told The Huffington Post both he and Spielberg tried to get the rights to the book at the same time but Spielberg beat him to the punch.

SEE ALSO: Hollywood's 10 Most Overpaid Actors >

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'The Hobbit' Is The Highest-Grossing December Film Of All Time — Here's Your Box-Office Roundup

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Bilbo Baggins The Hobbit

"The Hobbit" didn't break $100 million this weekend; however, it did manage to break the December box-office record.  

Not that it was difficult to beat. The previous record was held by Will Smith's "I Am Legend" from 2007 which earned $77.2 million on its debut. 

Compared to the previous "Lord of the Rings" films, Peter Jackson's prequel earned more than each opening weekend. However, considering the gap in years since the debut of the original trilogy, ticket sales and 3D and IMAX sales should have seen "The Hobbit" knock "The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King" $72.6 million opening in 2003 out of the park. 

There were few surprises this weekend at the box office. The only real shocker came from "Skyfall" which took a slight tumble in the top ten after taking over the top ten once again last week. 

Knocked out of the top ten are Brad Pitt's "Killing The Softly" and Denzel Washington's "Flight," making room for one well-deserved entry. 

Here are this week's winners and losers at the box office: 

10. "Silver Linings Playbook" finally makes it into the top ten after five weeks with slightly more than $2 million. The Weinstein Company's film has steadily earned at least $2 million every week since it's debut. 

9. "Red Dawn" drops one notch this week earning $2.4 million. The long-coming remake has earned $40.9 million to date, still nearly $25 million under its estimated budget. 

8. Gerard Butler's "Playing for Keeps" continues to sink in week two earning $3.2 million. The actor's latest romantic comedy has earned $10.8 million of its estimated $35 million budget. 

7. Disney's "Wreck-It Ralph" takes in another $3.3 million, bringing it's seven-week total to $226 million worldwide. 

6. "Twilight: Breaking Dawn Part 2" falls three places this week with $5.1 million. The final installment of the franchise has earned more than $778 million worldwide in five weeks. 

5. Ang Lee's "Life of Pi" stays at the same spot as last week earning $5.4 million. The film adaptation of the novel has earned most of its $198 million in ticket sales overseas. "Pi" has only managed to earn nearly $70 million of its $120 million estimated budget at home. 

4. The big surprise this week is how far "Skyfall" fell at theaters after reclaiming the box-office top spot last week from "Twilight." Instead, the 23rd Bond film fell three spots earning $7 million in week six. Craig's third time as 007 is now less than $50 million from hitting the billion dollar mark. 

3. With nearly 300 theaters added in week six, "Lincoln" moves up one spot this week earning $7.2 million. Steven Spielberg's film starring Daniel Day Lewis has now earned $107.9 million since its release. 

2. DreamWorks animated film "Rise of the Guardians" may not have opened strong the week after Thanksgiving; however, it's fighting to stay at the top of the box office with another $7.4 million. With $71.3 million domestically, the film is still far from its estimated $145 million budget. However, the animated picture has picked up abroad to bring its worldwide total to $190 million. 

1. Despite breaking the December record, which was no hard feat, "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" failed to cross the $100 million mark opening weekend, something a film opening in so many different formats (IMAX, IMAX 3D, high-frame-rate 3D, high-frame rate IMAX 3D, etc.) should have been able to easily accomplish with enough high-priced tickets sold. Instead, the first in the trilogy earned $84.8 million at home. Overseas, the film fared much better to bring its worldwide total to nearly $223 million. 

SEE ALSO: The most desirable women of the year >

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'Jack Reacher' Premiere Postponed & TV Shows Cancelled After Newtown Shooting

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jack reacher

In light of Friday's tragic Connecticut school shooting, two big film premieres have been postponed and a handful of violent TV shows forced not to air new episodes.

Tom Cruise's latest film "Jack Reacher" — about a former military police officer who is recruited by a sniper to help prove his innocence — was scheduled to premiere Saturday in Pittsburgh, where the movie was filmed.

Paramount Pictures released a statement saying: 

Due to the terrible tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut, and out of honor and respect for the families of the victims whose lives were senselessly taken, we are postponing tomorrow’s Pittsburgh premiere of "Jack Reacher." Our hearts go out to all those who lost loved ones.

"Jack Reacher" director and screenwriter, Christopher McQuarrie, agreed with Paramount's decision to cancel the Pittsburgh premiere, telling The Wrap "Nobody should be celebrating anything 24 hours after a tragic event like that."

Fox, too, cancelled Saturday's red carpet premiere in Los Angeles for Billy Crystal and Bette Midler's new movie, "Parental Guidance."

The studio said in a statement:

In light of the horrific tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut we are canceling the red carpet press event and the after party for the "Parental Guidance" premiere, scheduled today in downtown Los Angeles. The hearts of all involved with this film go out to the victims, their families, their community, and our entire nation in mourning.

Television networks also changed the tone of their content over the weekend in light of the sensitive situation:

SEE ALSO: Celebrities demand gun control on Twitter following school shooting >

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The First Full-Length Trailer For 'Star Trek Into Darkness' Warns Kirk He's Going To Get Everyone Killed

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Finally.

Since the debut of the "Star Trek Into Darkness" teaser trailer more than a week ago, we've been waiting for the full length trailer.

Well, it's here, and, unsurprisingly, it doesn't answer any of the questions we had before. We still know little about Benedict Cumberbatch's villain (though we're still convinced it's Khan from IMDBpro and a Japanese trailer), and Kirk is being told he's going to get everyone under his command killed. 

From the looks of the destruction in the trailer, it would appear that way.

Check out the trailer below:

SEE ALSO: How familiar the first poster for 'Star Trek Into Darkness' appears >

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'The Hobbit' Trailer Appears To Give Glimpses Into The Second Film

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gandalf the hobbit dol guldur

Did director Peter Jackson give glimpses of the next "Hobbit" film already?

Looks like it. 

We saw "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" over the weekend and couldn't help but feel like something was missing. 

After going back and re-watching one of the many trailers for Jackson's movie, we found there were a few scenes left out from the film. 

While some are minor, and don't add anything to the story (a shot of Bilbo walking by other Hobbits and a pig), there's a good portion with Gandalf which didn't make its way into the first film.

The more than 15 seconds absent from the first film features some of the most action-filled sequences with Gandalf that made the trailers for the film look so enticing. (Sure, Gandalf showed up to fight –spoiler alert – the goblins near the end of "An Unexpected Journey"; however, we were hoping to see the Grey wizard dance with some necromancers.)

witch king of angmar lord of the rings hobbitThe scenes in question undoubtedly show Gandalf at Dol Guldur – which (spoiler alert) if you've seen the film, know that this is the same place where wizard Radagast the Brown goes to and retrieves the sword of the Witch King of Angmar

Gandalf later heads with the dwarf company – and Bilbo – to show that same sword to the White Council of Rivendell who are taken aback by its presence.

We know Gandalf hasn't made his way yet to Dol Guldur after viewing the first film, but, from the shots in the trailer, it appears he will soon. 

What we see in the trailers is most likely a glimpse of scenes from the upcoming film, "The Desolation of Smaug," setting up the impending battle at Dol Guldur. 

Check them out below:

Here are shots of Gandalf clearly wandering around Dol Guldur – the same place as Radagast the Brown in "The Hobbit":

gandalf dol guldur the hobbit gandalf the hobbit dol guldur
gandalf the hobbit dol guldur

Here he is wandering around what looks like the ruins of the same place ...gandalf dol guldur

... and possibly searching around more hallways ...dol guldur gandalf the hobbit

However, it appears he isn't alone. Near the end of the trailer, Gandalf's seen getting in a scuffle with someone at the ruins.gandalf the hobbit dol guldur 

The scenes don't come as a surprise. We know that in order to drag out the 272-page book of "The Hobbit," that Jackson will be adding the Battle of Dol Guldur to the films. This is one of the items that appears partially in the final "Lord of the Rings" appendices, which Jackson said he would draw from to extend "The Hobbit."

However, it is a surprise that these scenes, which clearly didn't make it into the first film were included heavily in the first movie's trailer.

Watch the entire trailer below. The Gandalf clips begin at the 1:15 mark.

SEE ALSO: The first full-length trailer for "Star Trek Into Darkness">

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Hillbilly-Themed Porn Up 250% Following 'Honey Boo Boo' Craze

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Honey Boo Boo

TLC's hit reality show "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo" has become a pop culture phenomenon and it appears everyone is drinking 7-year-old Alana Thompson's "go-go juice."

TMZ reports that GameLink.com — one of the biggest websites in porn — "has seen a 250 percent increase in Southern, white-trashy porn titles since 2010 ... when the redneck reality shows began to take off."

In addition to TLC's "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo," A&E has found success with "Duck Wild" — a reality series about a Louisiana family who created a new kind of duck call — and MTV will soon be trying their luck in the genre with West Virginia-based reality show, "Buck Wild."

A rep for GameLink.com confirmed to TMZ that the porn company has seen record sales in the "hillbilly/redneck genre" — when just a few years ago before the reality shows hit the air, "hillbilly porn was one of the site's worst-sellers."

In September, the season finale of "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo" garnered an impressive 2.8 million viewers.

Former "Toddlers & Tiaras" star Alana and the self-proclaimed "redneck" Thompson family averaged 2.4 million viewers for all eight episode following its premiere — becoming TLC's third-highest-rated program of the year, behind "Long Island Medium" and "Breaking Amish," in its debut season.

Alana Thompson was named one of Barbara Walters' ""Most Fascinating People of 2012", while The New York Times dubbed the show a “poverty voyeurism comedy tour.

A&E's "Duck Wild," meanwhile, scored record-high ratings with 6.45 million viewers tuning in to its second season finale — beating out cable’s "American Horror Story," as well as "Survivor,""Nashville," and "X Factor."

The success of the "redneck genre" in mainstream media has led to recent porn movie titles such as "Hillbilly Honeys,""Real White Trash" and "Ozark Sex Fiend."

"Spoiled, gaudy rich people are so over. Spoiled, gaudy rednecks are in," writes Tricia Romano of The Daily Beast, adding that this new reality show genre is the "travel channel for the cultural elite.“

Robert Galinsky, the owner of New York Reality TV School, which coaches aspiring reality-TV stars, tells The Beast:

Perhaps it’s the economy that’s driving this need to see how the other half not living in McMansions lives. In an election year when we rejected a self-made half-billionaire and voted for the up-by-the-bootstraps president, it makes sense that the shows we’d be most entranced by aren’t featuring the rich and famous of Orange County, Beverly Hills, or even New Joisey, but the Louisiana-based Robertson clan of 'Duck Dynasty,' the purveyors of a perfect duck call ...

There is a sense of discovery. One thing people don’t talk about with reality television—the cultural snapshot that reality television takes. Like, wow! As much as we can travel around the world with our digital devices and we get on a plane and go anywhere, a lot of people still don’t travel. A lot of people don’t see the world.

SEE ALSO: TLC's 'Honey Boo Boo' family is getting a sweet raise for season 2 >

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Mark Wahlberg: 'Transformers 4' Is The Most Important Role Of My Career

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mark wahlberg transformers

Forget "Boogie Nights" and Oscar-nominated films "The Fighter" and "The Departed."

Mark Wahlberg says the most important role of his career will be his lead role in the upcoming "Transformers" film. (Mind you, the movie is the fourth pending film in the series.)

Wahlberg recently caught up with movie site comingsoon.net to share his excitement in working with Michael Bay so soon again after next year's "Pain & Gain."

While doing so, he expressed just how important the next installment in the franchise is to him.

"I loved the idea and I think we can make something really cool and kick-ass," said Wahlberg. "This is not something where it's already established and I'm just in there to get a paycheck. I'm thinking this is the most important role of my career and I can do something really special."

The untitled "Transformers 4" is currently slated for a 2014 release.

SEE ALSO: The explanation to the infamous ending of 'Sopranos' from the creator himself >

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The Highest-Grossing Films Of 2012

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the dark knight rises batman

In a year ripe with superheroes, sequels, and one last bite from the Twilight franchise, the box-office was booming in 2012.

We've taken a look at the 15 top-grossing films of the year worldwide.  

If you were a Bat in black, a Disney toon, or Kristen Stewart, the box-office bowed in your favor. 

We know "The Avengers" and "The Dark Knight Rises" were among the best performances at theaters this year. See what else joins them on the list.

15. "The Lorax": $348.8 million

Dr. Seuss' book adaptation was the first box-office surprise of the year, debuting to the third-highest March opening with $70.2 million.

(Box Office Mojo)



14. "Taken 2": $363.4 million

Critics may not have loved Liam Neeson's return as ex-CIA agent Bryan Mills, but audiences couldn't have been more thrilled to see the sequel to the 2009 action thriller. The film opened to the third-highest October debut with $50 million.

(Box Office Mojo)



13. "Snow White and the Huntsman": $396.4 million

Unlike Julia Roberts' "Mirror, Mirror," this Snow White had a smart marketing campaign geared toward men (This Is No Fairy Tale), plus the star power of Kristen Stewart. The film had the fourth-largest opening of the year.

(Box Office Mojo)



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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There's Finally A Release Date For The 'Anchorman' Sequel

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anchorman will ferrell conan

Ever since Will Ferrell confirmed Ron Burgundy will return to the news desk in a long-awaited sequel to 2004's hit, we've been waiting for more news about "Anchorman 2." 

Sure, we know the entire cast (including Christina Applegate) is returning and that Kristen Wiig is reportedly joining as another love interest for Ferrell; however, we had no clue about a release date until now. 

Yesterday, Paramount finally announced "Anchorman: The Legend Continues" will hit theaters December 20, 2013.  

There's no new preview out … yet. 

So, for now, settle for this first clip.  

Stay classy, planet Earth.

SEE ALSO: The most successful films of 2012 >

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The Latest Trailer For 'The Great Gatsby' Will Make You Wish It Wasn't Pushed Back Until Next Year

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the great gatsby leonardo dicaprio

The second trailer for Baz Luhrmann's "The Great Gatsby" has been released and it's better than the first.  

Sure, it still opens to Kanye West and Jay-Z's "No Church in the Wild"– which may seem a little silly; however, for a Luhrmann film, it works. 

The trailer reminds us partially of Luhrmann's "Moulin Rouge"– the outrageous partying, a warped over-the-top love song in the form of "Happy Together," and the outright over-extravagence –  and we have no qualms with that. 

The film, which was originally set for a Christmas release, was pushed back to a May 2013 release after Warner Bros. said it felt the film would perform better in the summer. The other, more logical reason to move the film back is so it wouldn't directly compete with both "Les Misérables" and DiCaprio's other movie, "Django Unchained," the same day. 

We've been hoping Luhrmann could breath life into Fitzgerald's tragic tale of the mysterious Mr. Gatsby after the 1974 adaptation of the film featuring Robert Redford

We just don't want to wait until May 10 of next year for the film. 

The film also stars Tobey Maguire, Carey Mulligan, and Joel Edgerton. 

Watch the trailer below:

If you're itching for more on Gatsby, Warner Bros. has slowly been unveiling new character posters for the film.  

Yesterday, the film's Facebook page released posters for both Daisy (Mulligan) and Gatsby (DiCaprio).  

We haven't seen DiCaprio look this young since prior to "The Departed."

leonardo dicaprio the great gatsby

the great gatsby carey mulligan

SEE ALSO: The release date for "Anchorman 2">

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Universal has its best year ever at the

The 19 Worst Plot Holes In Blockbuster Movies

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armageddon

Movies like "Batman Begins,""Jurassic Park" and "Mean Girls" enthralled audiences worldwide and gained huge fan followings. 

But they also have notable plot holes. While most movies are supposed to be fantasies, some of the events just don't make sense. 

A recent Reddit thread explored some of the worst oversights. 

The one in "Armageddon" was pointed out by star Ben Affleck, while another might change your view on the "Santa Claus" series. 

"In Jurassic Park, they restart the Park's systems in an attempt to get the fences back online"

"It works but they have to restart the power. Samuel L. Jackson leaves to go do that. He is gone for too long, so Laura Dern decides she needs to go do it. Muldoon gets a shotgun and goes with her. Why didn't you take a gun and go with Samuel L. Jackson?! They just let him get eaten."

Source: Reddit



"In 'Toy Story," Buzz believed he was a space ranger and not a toy."

"So how did he know how to freeze when humans were around?" 

Source: Reddit



"In Mean Girls, everyone thinks Cady made the Burn Book."

"But how did she get all those pictures of everyone if she was a new student?"

Source: Reddit



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Santa Claus Plays James Bond In This 'Snowfall' Video


'The Hobbit' May Be In Trouble At Theaters – Here's Your Box-Office Roundup

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Bilbo Baggins The Hobbit

"The Hobbit" may have held on to the box office for a second week in a row; however, its earnings are nowhere near where they should be.

And, that's a problem for the big $250 million budget film which is playing in IMAX, 3D, 3D IMAX, and high-frame rate versions.

In week two, the film has dropped nearly 60 percent in ticket sales growth. (The biggest loss recorded by a "Lord of the Rings" film was a 30 percent drop during week two of "The Return of the King.")

To date, the "LOTR" prequel has earned less than any of Jackson's previous Middle Earth films. (And, remember, each "LOTR" film cost under $100 million to make.)  

Meanwhile, Tom Cruise's "Jack Reacher" didn't bomb; however, it didn't perform anywhere near as well as previous Christmas performances, "Valkyrie" and "Mission Impossible – Ghost Protocol." 

Instead, the most unexpected weekend flop came from Disney's 3D re-release of "Monsters, Inc." 

And, "This is 40" continues Judd Apatow's streak of low-opening 2012 films. 

Out of the top ten this week are Weinstein Company's hugely successful "Silver Linings Playbook," Disney's "Wreck-It Ralph," and "Red Dawn."  

Gerard Butler's rom com "Playing for Keeps" finally takes a tumble in week three from spot eight to 20.  

Here are this week's winners and losers at the box office: 

10. Kristen Stewart's final installment of "Twilight" just clinches the last top spot in the top ten earning $2.6 million. The film may be falling off the box-office charts faster than "Skyfall" or "The Avengers," however, the vampire movie has earned more than any of the other films in the series with nearly $800 million worldwide. 

9. "Life of Pi" holds steady for Fox earning adding another $3.8 million in week five. Ang Lee's adaptation has earned $235.8 million worldwide to date. 

8. "Skyfall" finally makes a significant fall at the box office top roundup in week seven. Dropping four spots this week with $4.7 million, the 23rd Bond film has earned nearly $1 billion worldwide this year. 

7. Disney may want to reconsider its 3D re-releases. Its latest trip down memory lane, "Monsters, Inc." earned a disappointing $5 million opening weekend. Compared to Disney's four other 3D re-releases ("The Lion King,""Toy Story,""Beauty and the Beast," and "Finding Nemo"), "Monsters, Inc." earned the lowest of any of the films opening weekend. 

6. Barbra Streisand and Seth Rogen's "Guilt Trip" following a mom heading cross country with her grown son turned up sour with a meager $5.7 million debut. Paramount's estimated budget sits at $40 million, a number the film will struggle to hit with a current 37% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and underwhelmed reviews

5. Steven Spielberg's Oscar worthy "Lincoln" holds out in week seven earning $5.6 million. The film has earned a massive $116.8 million in U.S. 

4. We knew "Rise of the Guardians" would stick around through the holiday season. The film's $5.9 million in week four is still nowhere near DreamWork's "How to Train Your Dragon" status, nor will it be; however, the film has picked up earning $142.9 million overseas to bring its worldwide gross to $222.6 million. 

3. Judd Apatow's "sort-of" sequel to "Knocked Up,""This is 40," underperforms with $12 million. Back in 2007, the former earned $30.7 million opening weekend. Even 2009's unfunny "Funny People" debuted to $22.7 million. "This is 40" is another example of Apatow's underwhelming year at the box office after his "Wanderlust" bust with Jennifer Aniston and "The Five-Year Engagement.""This is 40" cost an estimated $35 million to produce.

2. "Jack Reacher" easily cruises into second place earning $15.6 million. Tom Cruise's latest action flick based on the novel "One Shot" by author Lee Child didn't exceed weekend expectations; however, the film didn't flop. Compared to Cruise's past two Christmas films, 2008's "Valkyrie" ($21 million) and last year's "Ghost Protocol" ($30 million), "Reacher" came up a bit short. 

1. "The Hobbit" still reigns supreme with $36.7 million at the box office. Though the number may seem huge, it's a disappointment given both the trajectory of "The Lord of Rings" series earnings at this same point nearly a decade ago and the added bump 3D, IMAX, and high frame rate showings should produce.  

Both "The Two Towers" and "The Return of the King" earned more than $48 million in its second week. Instead, "The Hobbit," is currently tracking much closer to "The Fellowship of the Rings" which earned $38.7 million in the same week.  

To date, the prequel has earned most of its money outside the U.S. bringing it to $433.9 million worldwide.

SEE ALSO:The highest-grossing films of 2012 >

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Do Not See 'Anna Karenina' The Movie

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Anna Karenina

For the holidays, buy someone you care about deeply Tolstoy's novel, Anna Karenina. Don't settle for silver or bronze — or modern dross — when you can give the purest gold. But do not go to Anna Karenina, the current movie, thinking you will get a two-hour essence of the novel. Joe Wright's film, while perhaps interesting in its own terms, is a perversion of one of the world's great books.

Once you have started the novel, you will be completely transported into a complex world that will enthrall, inspire, and awe you and ultimately break your heart. At the center is one of the great heroines of literature.You will fall in love with Anna as she leaves a cold marriage with a well-to-do Russian bureaucrat (Alexei Karenin) for a passionate affair with a young military officer (Count Vronsky), which evolves into pregnancy, societal recrimination, separation from the son she had with Karenin, moments of ecstasy with Vronsky, and then a slow spiral into guilt, insecurity, jealousy, and, ultimately, death. Surrounding the love triangle are the two contrasting marriages of Anna's brother, Stiva, and his wife, Dolly, and Dolly's sister Kitty and the landowner Levin. They are mirrors within mirrors, creating a sequential and dynamic series of vivid comparisons and reflections.

Anna Karenina is on lists of the top ten novels of all time (get the new Viking translation by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky). Ask anyone who has read it, and it will be among his or her favorite novels, if not at the top of the list. The reasons are many. But at the core is Tolstoy's genius at creating a universal world we are allowed to enter: of engaging people in a vivid but highly structured society who reflect the emotions, thoughts, motives, unconscious drives, conflicting actions, mistakes, happiness and sadness that is as close as we will ever come in literature to the totality of the human comedy (marriage) and the human tragedy (death). Shakespeare is Tolstoyean.

Anna Karenina, the film, ostensibly follows the arc of the novel, and the screenplay by Tom Stoppart includes many of the main characters and main scenes. But it is all slick surface. The film is a kaleidscope of arresting visuals - most set in a faux theater to give the film an operatic feel, some using real landscapes, all set to an original score. The set pieces are stunning, exemplified by an opening scene at a ball where Vronsky acts with indifference to Kitty, who has come with high expectations of a relationship and engages in a waltz of seduction with Anna. But the remarkable visual, often surreal, images obscure the essence of the novel: the humanity of character. Most remarkable is that Keira Knightly's Anna is superficial, selfish, and, hard as this is to achieve, unsympathetic. Vronsky is a pretty boy lacking in dashing and dangerous masculinity. And all the other characters who are in the great novel here have no depth, no development. They are literally cartoonish, made to utter but a few lines to move along the fast-paced tableaux. (The unpretentious Levin of the countryside, often seen as Tolstoy's alter-ego, is a scythe-swinging shadow of a real character.)

The one exception, oddly enough, is Karenin, played with a stoic complexity by Jude Law. He alone is allowed to change during the film, and he alone elicits sympathy, because he is not just an image but, as both the cause and victim of Anna's transformation has some semblance of real personhood. One of Stoppard's earliest plays was Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1966), which told Hamlet from the point of view of two minor courtiers. It is almost as if Stoppard is returning to that technique: looking primarily at Anna from a completely different angle - the cold husband whose lack of love drives the central dramatic action of the novel. The film could have been titled Alexei Karenin, not Anna Karenina.

What kind of Anna is it, then, which is largely images and surfaces, with little humanity, and where, in the little humanity that exists, Karenin is more sympathetic than Anna?

The film does raise the age-old argument about why and how novels can be - should be - translated into film. The modern debate begins with George Bluestone's provocative 1957 book, Novels Into Film, reissued by Johns Hopkins University Press 2003. A.O. Scott's review in The New York Times damns more literal adaptions of novels like Wright's earlier Pride and Prejudice, with Knightly taking a wonderful turn as Elizabeth Bennet. He praises this Anna, the ninth film version: "It is risky and ambitious enough to count as an act of artistic hubris, and confident enough to triumph on its own slightly - wonderfully - crazy terms. Pious Tolstoyans may knit their brows about the stylistic liberties..." 

I knit my brow not because of stylist liberties but because the film is so grossly divorced from the novel. For those who have never read Anna, Wright's movie could be viewed as an interesting piece of film-making, with striking visuals and dramatic rhythms. Symbolism replacing story. Even on its own terms, however, I found it to be directorial solipsism - look at me and all the film techniques I have employed - and tedious and empty. But for those who have read Anna, at least for me, the film is quite horrible, destroying, not just missing, the essence of a wonderful work of literature. For example, we can reflect endlessly on the contrast between Anna and Kitty. We love Anna for her passion and her pain and her understandable if doomed yearning for vibrancy in her life, while we admire Kitty for her strength and steadfastness and her old-fashioned virtue.

Of course, films of novels cannot faithfully replicate the whole work. Nor do they have to be slavish Cliff Notes. But they can, in the unique way of movies and in a variety of possible styles, convey the essence of the novel and its characters. Otherwise why bother? This movie is far more about Joe Wright and Tom Stoppard than about Tolstoy's masterpiece. Often, films of novels inspire people to go read the original work. Not here. My holiday advice: buy the novel as a true gift for those you love. And skip the movie.

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The Highest-Grossing Christmas Movie Openings Of All Time

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Samuel L Jackson Anne Hathaway

In the past month, we've seen the highly anticipated Hobbit film, "Skyfall," the final "Twilight" movie, and "Silver Linings Playbook" hit theaters, and the year isn't over yet.

We still have the Christmas Day releases of suspected Oscar front runner "Les Misérables" and Quentin Tarantino's gritty "Django Unchained."

While Box Office Mojo predicts both films will open to more than $100 million this weekend, how will they stack up to previous Christmas releases?

We've taken a look at the top Christmas Day debuts and it looks like this year's movies will blow all others – save possibly one – out of the water.

Source: Box Office Mojo

10. "Patch Adams" (1998): $8.1 million

Robin Williams stars in this true story about the life of Hunter Doherty "Patch" Adams. Williams earned a Golden Globe nomination for his role.



9. "Valkyrie" (2008): $8.5 million

Also based on a true story, this film recounts a foiled plot to assassinate Hitler. It went on to gross $200 million worldwide after its opening day.



8. "Dreamgirls" (2006): $8.7 million

"Dreamgirls," based on the Broadway musical, had a star-studded cast that included Beyoncé, Jennifer Hudson, Eddie Murphy, Jamie Foxx, and Danny Glover. Hudson's role won her an Oscar for best supporting actress.



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25 Facts About Your Favorite Christmas Movies

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flick scut a christmas story

Enjoy these elf-sized tidbits about some of the movies you’ll catch on TV every holiday season.

Scrooged

1. It just goes to show you: don’t shouldn’t mess with the Ghost of Christmas Present. During the scene where Carol Kane grabs Bill Murray’s lip, she really latched on and accidentally tore it so badly that they had to stop filming for a few days so Bill could heal and his injuries wouldn’t be so obvious on camera.

2. All of Bill Murray’s actor brothers are in the movie – that would be Brian Doyle-Murray, Joel Murray and John Murray.

3. That’s Paul Shaffer leading the street carolers Bill Murray insults. The other carolers are Miles Davis (yep, that Miles Davis), famous saxophone player David Sanborn and Grammy-winning jazz guitarist Larry Carlton. It’s a pretty illustrious group of carolers to be heckling, really.

It’s a Wonderful Life

4. The movie was mentioned in an FBI file in 1947, when an analyst passed along the concern that the film was an obvious attempt to discredit bankers, a “common trick used by Communists.”

5. Among other people, the notoriously cynical Dorothy Parker contributed some rewrites to the script. Maybe she had a soft spot for Christmas (or maybe the money was just that good).

6. Does George look strangely sweaty to you when he and Clarence are on the bridge? That’s because it was 90 degrees out the day that scene was filmed. But I think it works –- I always assumed he looked damp because of the snow and because he was in the middle of his nervous breakdown.

Babes in Toyland

7. The movie that is now a cult classic was, as many cult classics are, a colossal flop at the box office when it debuted.

8. A bunch of the pieces from the movie – Mary’s garden, the shoe house, the pumpkin house and the trees – were an attraction at Disneyland’s Opera House for about a year following the release of the movie.

9. Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color went behind the scenes for the movie’s wrap party… except since the whole wrap party was scripted and choreographed, it wasn’t really “behind the scenes,” exactly. Annette Funicello co-hosted it with Walt and it featured performances by many cast members.

Miracle on 34th Street

10. The scenes of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade are actually taken from the 1946 parade. The movie is credited with bringing the traditional parade to the national spotlight, and Macy’s employees were given half a day off so they could see the first showing of the movie. In fact…

11. Most people didn’t realize that Edmund Gwenn, Santa Claus in the movie, also played Santa Claus during the real 1946 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. He even played to the crowd from the marquee of Macy’s when the parade ended to open the “official” Christmas shopping season.

12. Kris Kringle tries to prove that he’s quite mentally competent by reciting various bits of knowledge, including that Daniel D. Tompkins was John Quincy Adams’ Vice President. Except… he wasn’t. John C. Calhoun was Adams’ Veep; Tompkins served under James Monroe.

A Christmas Story

13. For anyone keeping count, Ralphie says he wants the Red Ryder BB Gun 28 times throughout the course of the movie.

14. Jack Nicholson was very interested in playing Ralphie’s dad. But casting (and paying) Jack would have been too expensive. Director Bob Clark has said Darrin McGavin was the perfect choice.

15. Mythbusters tested whether it was possible to get your tongue truly stuck on a piece of cold metal. Guess what? It is. So don’t triple dog dare your best friend to try it.

National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation

16. The Capra family must have Christmas in their genes. The assistant director of Christmas Vacation, Frank Capra III, is the grandson of the legendary Frank Capra, who directed It’s a Wonderful Life. The part where Clark “fixes” the newel post by sawing it off with a chainsaw is an homage to It’s a Wonderful Life – the newel post at the Bailey’s house was also loose. Also, Russ is watching It’s a Wonderful Life on TV when his grandparents arrive.

17. I can always relate to the scene where the two grandpas are asleep in the armchairs while the Christmas parade is on TV in the background. This always happens at our Thanksgivings and Christmases – grandpas, dads, uncles. What makes the scene even funnier is that the actors who played the grandpas were supposedly both really asleep.

Elf

18. According to some reports, when the movie was first discussed back in 1993, Jim Carrey was going to play the lead.

19. Gimbels Department Store was a real department store and competitor of Macy’s until it closed in 1987. It was also featured in Miracle on 34th Street. The Gimbels exterior in the movie is actually the 34th Street Macy’s in Manhattan with a bit of digital alteration.

20. Ming Ming the elf from the beginning of the movie is Peter Billingsley, the actor who played Ralphie in A Christmas Story. That’s him in the picture. Billingsley and director Jon Favreau (along with actor Vince Vaughn) are good friends.

Home Alone

21. Like so many other Christmas movies, Home Alone slips in a reference to another Christmas classic: while (most) of the family is in the hotel room in France, they’re shown watching It’s a Wonderful Life.

22. Macaulay Culkin still has physical evidence of Kevin McAllister – in the scene where Harry bites Kevin’s finger, Joe Pesci bit harder than he’d intended and left Mac with a scar.

23. Daniel Stern wasn’t crazy about having to film a scene with a tarantula on his face, but agreed to it in the condition that they do just one take. His scream had to be dubbed in later because a real scream would have scared the tarantula.

The Polar Express

24. When the conductor says “11344 Edbrooke” near the beginning of the film, he’s referring to director Robert Zemeckis’ actual childhood home in Chicago.

25. Polar Express author Chris Van Allsburg gets a reference to his hometown in, too – when Hero Boy looks at a picture of himself on Santa’s lap, you can see that it was taken at Herpolsheimer’s. That was a real department store in Allsburg’s hometown of Grand Rapids, Michigan, which is also where the movie premiere was held.

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The Biggest Box-Office Bombs Of 2012

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While "The Avengers" and "The Dark Knight Rises" both saw more than $1 billion at the box office worldwide this year, there were many films which came up short at theaters.

From Kate Beckinsale and Jennifer Aniston to Judd Apatow to Disney's Andrew Stanton, big name actors and producers were not spared from big losses at theaters this year.

We've taken a look at 25 of this year's biggest box-office busts, surprises, and upsets which failed to hit the mark with audiences.

We came up with our rankings based on comparisons of the film's budgets with domestic and worldwide intake and opening weekend expectations versus actual intake.

One thing's for sure, life after "Friday Night Lights" has not been kind to Taylor Kitsch.

25. "Mirror Mirror"

Opening Weekend:
$18.1 million 
Estimated Budget:
$85 million 
Worldwide Gross: 
$166.2 million
Distributor: Relativity

There was only room for one "Snow White" film this summer. Julia Roberts' lighthearted take on the fairytale tanked at the box office when it earned $18 million of its estimated $85 million budget opening weekend. The Relativity movie was expected to debut between $22 and $24 million opening weekend.

Though the film ended up earning $166.2 million worldwide, domestically "Mirror Mirror" brought in $64.9 million.



24. "One for the Money"

Opening Weekend:
$11.5 million
Estimated Budget:
$40 million

Worldwide Gross: 
$36.9 million
Distributor: Lionsgate

The opening weekend of Katherine Heigl's latest film was one of the star's least-grossing movies since she appeared in 2005's "The Ringer." Since her role in "Knocked Up," the former "Grey's Anatomy" star has had a significant decline in theater intake leaving many to wonder where Heigl's career will go from here.



23. "Fun Size"

Opening Weekend:
$4.1 million
Estimated Budget
$14 million
Worldwide Gross
$9.4 million
Distributor: Paramount / Nickelodeon

If Nickelodeon needed a wake-up call to show it has little idea of its current demographic, look no further than "Fun Size," an attempt at a younger version of "Super Bad" for pre-teens.

This movie may have worked in 2010, when the network's ratings were up due to hits including "iCarly" and "Victorious"– the latter featuring one of the stars of "Fun Size." However, with re-runs often playing, the novelty has worn off, and with it, the ratings of the network have also slid.



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