Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

‘THINK LIKE A MAN' ENDS ‘HUNGER GAMES’ STREAK

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LOSANGELES, April 22 (Reuters) - The box office competitio­n finally overwhelme­d “The Hunger Games” as the romantic comedy “Think Like a Man” beat expectatio­ns with a chart-topping $33.0 million in U.S. and Canadian ticket sales over the weekend.

Love story “The Lucky One” also exceeded forecasts to finish second with $22.8 million from Friday through Sunday, according to studio estimates. The two films pushed the blockbuste­r “Hunger Games” to third, ending its four-week streak at No. 1. “Think Like a Man” is based on comedian Steve Harvey’s best-selling, non-fiction relationsh­ip guide “Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man.”

The movie follows four couples trying to work out various issues and stars Gabrielle Union, Kevin Hart, Michael Ealy, Romany Malco, hip-hop singer Chris Brown and Oscar-nominated actress Taraji P. Henson. Harvey was executive producer and has a small role playing himself. The film cost a modest $13 million to make, and received positive feedback in prerelease screenings, said Rory Bruer, president of w worldwide distributi­io tion for Sony Corp’s So Sony Pictures studio.

“We definitely y felt like we had a hit coming,” Bruer er said.

Still, the weekend performanc­e “exceeded everyone’s expectatio­ns,” he said. Audiences gave “Think Like a Man” an “A” grade in polling by survey firm Cinemascor­e.

“The Lucky One” tells the story of a U.S. Marine who returns from his third tour of duty in Iraq, convinced that the one thing that kept him safe and alive was a photograph of a beautiful woman he found in the rubble of war.

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It also was based on a book, a 2008 best-seller from wellknown “Notebook” author Nicholas Sparks. The movie stars Zac Efron and Taylor Schilling and cost about $25 million to produce.

Efron's female fan base helped the movie beat forecasts.

Fifty-seven percent of moviegoers polled said the actor was their top reason for seeing the film, said Jeff Goldstein, executive Vice President of domestic distributi­on for Time Warner Inc's Warner Bros. Studio.

“The Lucky One” added $3.8 million from nine internatio­nal markets, bringing its global debut to $26.6 million.

“Hunger Games,” the smash hit about an o p p r e s -sive society's televised teen death match, took in an estimated $14.5 million at U. S and Canadian theatres during the weekend. Global sales for the film from Lions Gate Entertainm­ent Corp reached $572.7 million since its release.

The weekend's other new movie, nature document a r y “Chimpanzee,” finished in fourth place with $10.2 million. It scored the highest opening among four films released by Walt Disney Co's Disney Nature film unit, which makes wildlife movies and supports conservati­on efforts.

Comedy “The Three Stooges,” from News Corp's 20th Century Fox studio, finished fifth with $9.2 million.

Also this weekend, action movie “Battleship” pulled in $58.4 million during its second weekend in internatio­nal markets and brought its total to $129.6 million. The movie from Comcast Cor p's Universal Pictures opens in the United States and Canada on May 18.

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