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The debut of the Nicholas Cage science-fiction thriller “Knowing” took top honors at the weekend box office, raking in some $24.8 million through Sunday morning, according to studio estimates.


The picture, released by privately held Summit Entertainment, knocked “Race to Witch Mountain” out of the top spot, with the Disney film falling to fourth place with $13 million in ticket sales.


cover art

Knowing

Director: Alex Proyas
Cast: Nicolas Cage, Chandler Canterbury, Rose Byrne, D.G. Maloney, Lara Robinson, Nadia Townsend

(Summit Entertainment; US theatrical: 20 Mar 2009 (General release); UK theatrical: 25 Mar 2009 (General release); 2009)

Review [20.Mar.2009]

Two other new films - Viacom’s “I Love You, Man” and “Duplicity” from General Electric’s Universal Pictures - were in the second and third spots for the week, with totals of $18 million and $14.4 million, respectively.


Time Warner’s “Watchmen” came in fifth at $6.7 million followed by “The Last House on the Left” - a gorefest from Universal - with $5.9 million.


Rounding out the top 10 were “Taken” and “Slumdog Millionaire” both from News Corp’s Fox; “Madea Goes to Jail” from Lionsgate; and “Coraline” from Focus Features, a unit of Universal.


“Slumdog” is still tops to date, though, with a total of $137.2 million while “Taken” holds the runner-up spot at $133.1 million.


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5 Jan 2010
Someone, the same old suspects show up on this list - cheesy horror films, goofy gross out comedies, and the occasional certified WTF title. Lucky for us, 2009 was no different when it came to culpable schlock.
20 Mar 2009
Knowing’s premise is intriguing, even if it ends up being a familiar race-against-time-disaster-movie.
29 May 2007
The serious Science Fiction film genre is dead or at least on cinematic life support. As the new millennial marches forward, and an omnipresent production paradigm that substitutes spectacle for smarts, futurist filmmaking is definitely gasping for breath.
13 Dec 2004
'It's harder and harder to make straight-ahead sci-fi and straight-ahead comic book movies,' says Akiva Goldsman.
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