USA TODAY International Edition

‘ Safe House’ denies entry to new ‘ Ghost Rider’

Cage’s sequel can manage only third

- By Scott Bowles USA TODAY

Despite a marketing CPR attempt to jump- start the franchise, Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance couldn’t overtake last week’s movies at the box office.

Spirit of Vengeance, a sequel to the critically panned 2007 hit, took third place this weekend, snatching up $ 22 million, according to studio estimates from Exhibitor Relations.

A hip ad campaign, which focused more on effects than star Nicolas Cage, prompted analysts to project at least $ 30 million in tickets sold. And preliminar­y tracking reports suggested that the movie was higher on teenagers’ radar than the first movie, which made a surprising $ 116 million.

But this comic- book adaptation about a stunt motorcycli­st who sells his soul to the devil will have to kick sales into overdrive if it hopes to match the original, which made its debut with $ 45 million.

Vengeance managed a thumbs- up from just 17% of critics, according to amalgam site Rottentoma­toes . com. Fans shrugged, giving the film a C- plus, according to Cinemascor­e.

The movie “benefited from an on- target marketing campaign” directed at young men, says Joshua Weinstein, box- office analyst for industry site Thewrap. com. But the movie “is unlikely to recover from the C- plus” audiences gave it.

Tim Briody of Box office prophets is more blunt. He calls Spirit of Vengeance a “textbook example of Unwanted Sequel Syndrome.”

Box- office holdovers had little trouble keeping moviegoers interested. The Denzel Washington thriller Safe House claimed first place in its second weekend with $ 24 million, lifting its 10- day total to $ 78.2 million.

The love story The Vow took the second spot, making $ 23.6 million. The movie, starring Rachel Mcadams and Channing Tatum, has grossed $ 85.5 million.

Dwayne Johnson’s family adventure Journey 2: The Mysterious Island took fourth with $ 20.1million. Island has captured $ 53.2 million over two weekends.

The only other major release of the weekend, the Reese Witherspoo­n romantic comedy This Means War, ranked fifth with $ 17.6 million, meeting most of its expectatio­ns. Briody says War couldn’t snatch enough business from The Vow. War, he says, “ran smack into Channing Tatum’s abs.”

Final figures are due Tuesday because of the Presidents Day holiday.

 ?? By Jasin Boland, Universal Studios ?? Safely in first place: Ryan Reynolds, left, and Denzel Washington’s spy thriller has earned $ 78.2 million.
By Jasin Boland, Universal Studios Safely in first place: Ryan Reynolds, left, and Denzel Washington’s spy thriller has earned $ 78.2 million.

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