Hollywood declares box office truce after massacre

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    LOS ANGELES: The Hollywood studio behind the Batman movies decided not to publish weekend box office figures after the Colorado massacre — a move swiftly followed by rivals, wary of offending the public.

     

    Warner Brothers also canceled red carpet events for the film in France,  Japan and Mexico — and in a separate move scrambled to pull a trailer for  another film, including a scene in which mobsters shoot at theater audiences.
     
    Friday’s massacre, in which a black-clad gunman dressed in full body armor  gunned down dozens of filmgoers at a packed midnight premier of “The Dark  Knight Rises,” produced a marketing nightmare for the film’s makers.
     
    Within hours they had canceled the movie’s Paris premiere, which was to  have been accompanied by a press junket with the cast and crew including  director Christopher Nolan and main star Christian Bale.
     
    After initial radio silence from most of the cast and crew, Nolan issued a  statement lamenting the “senseless tragedy,” and expressing “our profound  sorrow at the senseless tragedy that has befallen the entire Aurora community.”    
     
    On Saturday Bale, who plays Bruce Wayne aka Batman, said: “Words cannot  express the horror that I feel .. ..I cannot begin to truly understand the pain  and grief of the victims and their loved ones, but my heart goes out to them.”    
     
    Warner Bros issued a statement early on saying it was “deeply saddened,”  and then on Saturday a spokeswoman confirmed that the studio will not publish  weekend takings — a form of crowing about box office success — until Monday.
       
    This was despite the fact that unofficial figures cited by industry daily Variety suggest that it made $75 million on Friday alone, the third biggest  opening day ever at the US box office.
     
    The Hollywood Reporter reported Saturday that “The Dark Knight Rises,” the climax of the blockbuster trilogy, was set to make $165-170 million over the  weekend. 
     
    If confirmed, that would make it the second or third highest debut weekend  ever, after this year’s blockbuster “The Avengers” on $207.4 million, and level with “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, on $169.2 million last year.
     
    But Warners said it will not publish the figures until Monday.
     
    “Out of respect for the victims and their families, Warner Bros. Pictures will not be reporting box office numbers for ’The Dark Knight Rises’ throughout  the weekend,” said a spokeswoman.
     
    The move was swiftly followed by major Hollywood rivals including Disney, Fox, Sony, Lionsgate and Universal.
       
    Box office tracker Exhibitor Relations confirmed that Warner and “many  other studios” were withholding their takings numbers until May, adding: 
     
    “Whatever we get, we will send out.”    “I think it’s a nice gesture, but taking this from the fans is sort of like  reporting on the Super Bowl and not giving the final score,” the industry data  tracker’s Jeff Bock told AFP.
     
    Warner Bros also announced that red carpet events planned in Mexico and  Japan for the movie had been canceled, although screenings will go ahead as  planned.
     
    “Due to the tragic events in Aurora, Colorado, Warner Bros. Pictures has  cancelled the previously scheduled personal appearances by the cast and  filmmakers in Mexico and Japan on behalf of The Dark Knight Rises,” it said. 
     
    Separately, the studio was forced to scramble to cut a trailer for “Gangster Squad,” a 1940s mobster movie starring Sean Penn, Emma Stone and Josh  Brolin, because of a shooting scene eerily similar to the Colorado massacre.
     
    Worse, the trailer had featured in a trailer package running before “The  Dark Knight Rises.”    
     
    Although it did not run before the movie at the Aurora theater where the  massacre occurred shortly after midnight, it was still running elsewhere Friday  evening, although had been mostly cut by Saturday, according to media reports.
     
    It is also no longer viewable on websites including YouTube.
     
    The Los Angeles Times reported Saturday that Warners is considering  delaying its planned September release, or making changes to the movie to take  into account sensibilities after the Colorado shooting.      
     
    But it said editing the gunman-shooting-at-theater-audience scene could be  difficult: it will be difficult to cut altogether because it is serves as a  climactic moment. 
     
    Any significant changes might require shooting new scenes, the newspaper reported. AFP
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