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Monday, May 28, 2007

Third 'Pirates' Sets Sail for Memorial Day Record




Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End: Jack Sparrow

LOS ANGELES - Spider-Man 3 and Shrek the Third may have set opening weekend box office records this month, but Hollywood thinks the latest Pirates of the Caribbean movie will steal a hefty chunk of the summer movie season's treasure.

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, which opens on Friday in 102 countries and territories is the final film in a trilogy that has so far grossed $1.7 billion at global box offices and has sold 40 million DVDs and home videos for the Walt Disney Co.

Advance ticket sales for the film were on par with the record-breaking $151 million debut earlier this month for Sony Corp.'s Spider-Man 3, but the film's length--nearly three hours with trailers--will limit the number of times it is shown and could affect its 3-day total, said Jeff Bock, an analyst for box office tracking firm Exhibitor Relations.

But At World's End will be opening in a record 4,362 North American theaters, about 110 more than Spider-Man 3 and about 200 more than DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc.'s Shrek the Third, which set an opening-weekend record last week for an animated film at $122 million.

"We are looking at a bow (debut) that's got to be between Shrek the Third and Spider-Man 3, and if everything works out it, could surpass it," Bock said.

"No doubt it will be the biggest Memorial Day opening weekend, eclipsing X-Men: The Last Stand with a four-day $122 million total."

Top U.S. online ticket sellers Fandango.com and MovieTickets.com both showed At World's End outpacing Spider-Man at the same point in the sales cycle.

Disney Chief Executive Robert Iger told attendees at the Society of American Business Editors and Writers this week he was anxiously awaiting the public's reaction to the new film.

"This is one of those weekends where you are on your computer or waiting by the phone to get the results almost on an hourly basis," Iger said.

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, the second film in the series, was the first live-action movie to pass $1 billion in global box-office sales during a theatrical run. Disney has positioned itself to reap the full benefit of what could be the lucrative franchise's final film.

The company enlisted 13 corporate partners--the most ever for any Disney film--to promote At World's End. The partners include Volvo, Verizon Communications Inc., Coca-Cola Co., Circuit City, Best Buy and Toys 'R Us.

Disney has shipped 2.8 million of its new video game and 2 million books from its Pirates of the Caribbean series in conjunction with the release of At World's End. The book franchise, which boasts 60 titles, has already sold 9 million copies.

Pirates merchandise is the company's No. 2 selling line from a feature film, behind Cars, and the company plans to continue with the line of clothing, jewelry, furnishings, toys and collectibles for years to come, a Disney spokesman said.

The Walt Disney World and Disneyland theme parks installed WiFi hot spots that let gamers download exclusive content for the online Pirates game. Disneyland retooled its Tom Sawyer Island as a "Pirates Lair" that opens on Friday.

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