Happy Death Day - Official Trailer - In Theaters Friday The 13th October (HD)

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Just saw it. No major expectations. I stay engaged; enjoyed it overall. It didn't overstay its welcome, and I honestly didn't guess the killer, though it was a logical choice.
 

Knights89

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Blumhouse Has Plenty To Smile About As ‘Happy Death Day’ Scares Up $26M+ Opening
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by Anthony D'Alessandro

October 14, 2017 12:00am
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3rd update, Saturday 12AM: A microbudget horror film, Blumhouse/Universal’s Happy Death Day, is beating the very expensive sci-fi Alcon Entertainment/Sony sequel Blade Runner 2049‘s second weekend respectively $26.2M to $13.8M.

On some level, the mere result of that has to be a studio marketing chief’s nightmare: For all the efforts to build a massive event film in Blade Runner 2049, the motion picture is then undermined by a high-concept genre pic with a fresh face cast. Furthermore, Happy Death Day is pulling in a younger crowd with 55% under 25. Months ago we all assumed that Blade Runner 2049 would carry us through October. Who knew Happy Death Day would win this weekend?

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Universal
Paramount sniffed danger when Blumhouse planted the title on this date, looking to grab Jennifer Lawrence’s femme fans away. At one point, Darren Aronofsky’s mother! was scheduled to open here, but then moved to Sept. 15. Indeed, per ComScore/Screen Engine’s PostTrak, women under 25 are the biggest demo at Happy Death Day with 33%. Overall, Happy Death Day gets a B CinemaScore which is outstanding for a horror movie (‘A’s are rare for the genre) and that grade outstrips the CinemaScores for Blumhouse’s Ouija movies (both Cs), Unfriended (C), The Purge (C), and most of the Paranormal Activity canon with the exception of Paranormal Activity 2 which earned a B. In addition being a horror movie with a fresh Rotten Tomatoes rating (68%) also assists in spinning turnstiles.





Happy Death Day marks the third best start this year for a Blumhouse title after Split ($40M) and Get Out ($33.3M), not to mention all three films are original movies, not sequels. The genre house’s gift, like Marvel, is that they know their audience’s wants, needs and turnoffs. Moviegoing begets moviegoing, and Happy Death Day had the great fortune of being a trailer that played before It for the last six weeks, so the pic received plenty of exposure before its potential target audience and then some. Before you can say, “Well Paramount did that too with mother!”, moviegoers are smart enough to decipher between a real horror movie and an arthouse gonzo thriller. Since dropping in June, Happy Death Day‘s original online trailer was viewed more than 157M times to date. In addition, Happy Death Day was the only film advertiser with spots in front of Taylor Swift’s “Look What You Made Me Do” video, which broke YouTube/Vevo records with more than 43M views in 24 hours.

The cast and filmmakers participated in the opening night festivities of Universal Studios Halloween Horror Nights, where The Horrors of Blumhouse featured a Happy Death Day-themed maze with the killer from the film. Social media monitor RelishMix was over the moon about the stunt: “Universal tagged alongside 13 Reasons Why star, Dylan Minnette as he went through the maze. This is a great and unique tactic, to use a star who isn’t even in the film and target his fans, many of whom saw him in 13 Reasons among other works.” In addition, RelishMix noticed heading into the weekend that positive word of mouth outweighed the negative: “Fans looking forward to Happy Death Day describe it as a combination of Groundhog Day and Scream. Moviegoers understand that this isn’t meant to be the scariest movie in the world, but the re-occurring day plot seems to have fans excited.”


Spots for Happy Death Day aired during genre TV series such as Fear of the Walking Dead, American Horror Story, The Exorcist and Supernatural. Of note, there were four sequential spots telling an unfolding narrative in a media stunt within the Bachelor in Paradise premiere in August.

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Warner Bros.
Alcon Entertainment/Sony’s Blade Runner 2049 is -58% with $13.8M and a running 10-day cume of $59.3M. We deconstructed quite greatly last weekend in two pieceswhat went sideways here commercially for this sci-fi sequel which cost in excess of $155M net, and the numbers speak for themselves. That said, we can’t chastise Alcon’s ambition to make this gorgeous, riveting piece of cinema that’s very faithful in all aspects to the original Ridley Scott 1982 film. As streaming encroaches on theatergoing, more creative risks like Blade Runner 2049 should be made, because if the industry fails to do so, we’ll just be watching comic book movies for all eternity and they’ll be no reason to head out to the theater. Blade Runner 2049 is best savored on the big screen. True, a PG-13 rating and shorter film could have gone a long way in regards to getting Marvel fanboys in the room, or a marketing campaign that reintroduced the brand to a new generation. A cheaper film would enable us to size up the pic’s profitability in a better light. Hopefully awards season carries Blade Runner 2049‘s prestige to a higher ground than on the box office charts. On the bright side, through 10-days, Blade Runner 2049 is pacing 36% ahead of Denis Villeneuve’s Arrival at the same point in time which ended its stateside run at $100.5M.

Sony is hoping that Japan and China deliver greatly to push their foreign end to a profit after their net $90M investment. In the more mature markets where moviegoers remember the original Blade Runner, read Italy, Germany and the United Kingdom, there’s a rich ancillary in the studio’s Pan BSkyB TV deal. Ditto for Japan as well. The Culver City studio is first in the waterfall in regards to the pic’s revenue stream, will receive a share of global revenues and is collecting a distribution fee on overseas ticket sales.

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STXfilms
STXfilms has its Chinese Wanda co-production The Foreigner which is beating the low end of expectations with a $12.2Mstart and an A- CinemaScore and 79% overall positive from PostTrak. The pic was financed for $35M before P&A. By the end of this weekend, the pic’s foreign B.O. –80% of which comes from the Middle Kingdom– should reside at $88.4M. Adding in domestic, that means this Jackie Chan pic will be at $100M worldwide. As a Chinese co-production, The Foreigner will see more than the standard 25% rental which a U.S. title earns, in this case it’s 45% or an estimated $32M to date. Stateside P&A is estimated at $25M. Some believe The Foreigner will be OK in the end. Critics were so-so giving it a 56% Rotten rating. Chan is the biggest social media star with 65.3M fans. Social media universe is strong at over 120M per RelishMix. PostTrak shows 47% men over 25 followed by 30% females over 25. Demos are spread out with 47% Caucasian, 17% Asian, 17% African American and 13% Hispanic. RelishMix notices that Chan is the driving force with audiences piqued by the martial arts star in a more dramatic role. “Some have even pointed out that it looks better than other recent revenge thrillers. More curiosity surrounds Jackie Chan continuing to execute his own stunts, despite his age,” says RelishMix.

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Open Road Films
Then we have two sophisticated adult films which aren’t popping. Open Road’s Marshall is doing OK with a $3.2M take on 821 locations while Annapurna’s spicy polygamy drama Professor Marston and the Wonder Women is truly nosediving with an $819K start on 1,229 screens. Both received similar certified fresh Rotten Tomatoes ratings of 86%-87%. So why isn’t anyone going? Professor Marston tried to hook its sail to the Wonder Woman summer craze (it is about her authors after all) with a presence at Comic-Con, and a a TIFF premiere. Point blank, neither title is screaming awards season contender, and if they were, there would be an attempt to protect these titles as limited releases, and build up word of mouth. When distributors go wide with niche adult dramas such as this, it means that there’s more risk in a platform rollout, and the best bet is to make as much money as possible in as many theaters as possible. In addition, with so many awards season dramas coming down the pike –i.e. Roman J. Israel, Esq; Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri; Lady Bird; and Last Flag Flying, distributors have but no choice to find a place on the fall schedule, and simply go.

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Annapurna


Despite great performances, Marshall is a straightforward courtroom drama that doesn’t pack the punch. As far as Professor Marston, the polygamy of it all, just isn’t so sexy. As Variety‘s Peter Debruge rails, “This is arguably the phoniest film you’ll see all year, marred by clumsy direction, over-obvious acting and a wooden script that skews what was so radical about the thruple’s arrangement into something tame and downright boring.”

Industry estimates for the weekend of October 13-15:

1.)Happy Death Day (UNI/BLUM), 3,149 theaters / $11.3M Fri. (includes $1M previews) / 3-day cume: $26.2M / Wk 1

2.)Blade Runner 2049 (ALC/WB/SONY), 4,058 theaters (0)/ $4.2M Fri. (-67%)/ 3-day cume: $13.8M (-58%) /Total: $59.3M/ Wk 2

3.)The Foreigner (STX), 2,515 theaters / $4.5M Fri. (includes $775K) / 3-day cume: $12.2M / Wk 1

4.) It (NL/WB), 3,176 theaters (-429) / $1.9M Fri. (-28%)/3-day cume: $6.3M (-36%) / Total: $315.2M / Wk 6

5.)The Mountain Between Us (FOX), 3,259 heaters (+171)/ $1.7M Fri. (-51%) /3-day cume: $5.77M (-45%)/Total: $20.7M/ Wk 2

6.) American Made (UNI), 3,098 (+67) / $1.54M Fri. (-34%)/ 3-day cume: $5.29M (-37%)/Total: $40M/ Wk 3

7.) Kingsman: The Golden Circle (FOX), 2,982 theaters (-506) / $1.4M Fri. (-36%)/3-day cume: $5M (-42%) / Total: $89.4M / Wk 4

8.) The Lego Ninjago Movie (WB), 3,053 theaters (-558) / $996K Fri./3-day cume: $4.86M (-31%) / Total: $52.1M / Wk 4

9.)My Little Pony (LG), 2,528 theaters (0) / $981K Fri. (-67%)/3-day cume: $4.6M (-48%) /Total: $16.1M/ Wk 2

10) Marshall (OR) 821 screens, $1M Fri /3-day: $3.2M/Wk 1

11.) Victoria & Abdul (FOCUS), 900 theaters (+168) / $951k Fri. (-23%)/3-day cume: $3.1M (-24%)/Total: $11.38M/ Wk 4

looking like Blumhouse got another hit on their hands
 

NobodyReally

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Happy Death Day follows in the tradition of the recent surge of ‘Groundhog Day’ style movies, where the main character relives the same day over and over again, until they have an epiphany or figure out the key to a mystery. Although many critics are treating this idea as a tired cliche, it really hasn’t been used that often to called tired. It is more of a trope now. And screenwriter Scott Lobdell proves that just because something is a trope doesn’t mean it has to play out in a cliche way. This movie was a lot of fun. Mostly because just when you think you know what is going to happen or who the killer is, it plays out differently. I also really enjoyed the character development here. The main character is a a$$hole, and literally anyone could be her killer, but towards the end you are rooting for her.

It’s not a perfect movie. Towards the end, things happened a little too conveniently and quickly, but I appreciated the effort they put into making things cohesive and logical, even if it did stretch my suspension of disbelief at times. There was some clunky dialogue and B grade acting here and there, but overall, Jessica Roth and Israel Broussard as her love interest Carter did a pretty good job and carried the film. There was also a good balance of humor and suspense. The film never really took itself too seriously, which I think was key to pulling this kind of story off.

For this genre of movie, I give Happy Death Day a B- , or a 7 out of 10. If you want a fun popcorn thrill with a few laughs thrown in, this is a good choice.
 

BXKingPin82

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My sister said this was kinda dope.

Shes usually on point.
:ohhh:
 

nieman

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The best way I can put it is that it was entertaining enough, even if you guessed the killer. I mean, she's such an a$$hole that any guess is correct. Hell, she even starts catchin wreck. BUT, it'd be much better if you didn't pay for it. I'd give it a B-.
 

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What other movies follow this formula besides the obvious?

I love these types of movies.

Source code, edge of tomorrow :ohlawd:

Please don't State the obvious
 
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