Watched this on the eve of Mother's day. Since the previous day rushed home becoz Stariel fell off the bed (See previous blogs) when i was out.For someone who is TOTALLY NOT a Star Trek fan since i was a kid (coz i tot those men in pointed ears and boring suits are unattractive and walking in the boring spaceship, and wonder why my dad's hooked to it, kinda); it was a Good show! i tot this time, after prolly 20 over years since i 1st saw it on TV?And i think it beats Wolverine, or at least doesn't lose to it. Well, there's an eye candy, tho i dun even bother to remember the name of him.This time im not bothering to give the story breakdown. Go watch it for yourself, worth the watch
That figure far surpassed the opening
grosses posted by any of the previous 10 "Star Trek" films, even when
adjusted for inflation, and kept up a robust pace for the second week
of Hollywood's summer moviegoing season.Combined with $4 million
grossed from Thursday evening's preview screenings, "Star Trek" tallied
$76.5 million in U.S. and Canadian receipts through Sunday, according
to its distributor, Viacom Inc's Paramount Pictures studio.Last
weekend's top box office entry, "X-Men Origins: Wolverine," still ranks
as the biggest film opening so far this year, with $85 million in its
first Friday-through-Sunday tally.But the launch of "Star Trek"
slashed deeply into "Wolverine's" second weekend of business, sending
the superhero adventure from News Corp's NWSA.0 20th Century Fox to a
second-ranked $27 million.By comparison, "Star Trek" seems
poised to hold fairly steady next weekend given that its ticket sales
rose from Friday to Saturday, a sign of strong word-of-mouth buzz, said
Paul Dergarabedian, box office analyst for Hollywood.com.The
$130 million film ranks among the best reviewed movies of the year, and
one of the most well-received by critics of all the "Star Trek"
pictures."PLAY LONG AND PROSPER"Directed by J.J. Abrams,
the latest film is intended as a "reboot" of the original 1960s
television series, with updated special effects and a story line that
explains how the crew of the galaxy-hopping Starship Enterprise,
including Captain James T. Kirk and his half-Vulcan first officer,
Spock, first met.Leonard Nimoy, who originated the Spock
character on TV, dons pointy ears again and even recites the Vulcan
salutation, "Live long and prosper," for a featured appearance in the
new movie as an elder Spock.Despite early pre-release tracking
data showing weak anticipation levels, the film seems to have won over
both older "Trekkie" fans of the franchise and younger moviegoers on
whom financial success depends, Paramount executive Don Harris said."The way this film is being received ... it looks like the movie will play long and prosper," he said."Wolverine,"
which stars Hugh Jackman reprising his role as the ferocious but
conflicted superhero with steel claws, has received far-less glowing
reviews than "Star Trek." Marking the fourth title in the "X-Men"
series, its 10-day tally stands at $130 million.Although ticket
sales for its second weekend dropped 68 percent from its opening
three-day stretch, Fox executive Chris Aronson said the studio was
pleased. "It's what franchise movies do, and given the competition in
the marketplace, it's right in line with expectations," he said.The
12 highest-grossing movies this weekend collectively amassed nearly
$141 million in North America, up almost 20 percent from the same
weekend a year ago, while year-to-date revenues and attendance are also
up by double-digits.Rounding out this weekend's top five films
were the romantic comedy "Ghosts of Girlfriends Past," with $10.5
million, the thriller "Obsessed," at $6.6 million, and the comedy "17
Again," with $4.4 million. The only other new wide release, the comic
crime yarn "Next Day Air," opened at No. 6 with $4 million.
Hi there, have performed at weddings (e.g Conrad, Four Seasons Hotel etc.) and at a doctors' dinner event. To hear my playing/singing, you can go to my Profile