With five nominations each, the silent movie The Artist and the apocalyptic drama Take Shelter dominated the nominati... Read More
Number Jam
69.6%
Drop in the second weekend for 'The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 1' after it's non-record breaking opening.
$179,278,000
Opening week for 'Breaking Dawn', placing it number 6 all time, well below New Moon's $188 million from 2009 and the number 1 'The Dark Knight' ($238 million).
$29,500,000
Opening weekend for 'The Muppets' reboot.
$7,906,689
Previous high opening for a Muppet movie (1996's 'Muppet Treasure Island'), not counting the unavailable data for the original 'The Muppet Movie' from 1979.
$33,362,609
Average total box office gross for all 6 previous Muppet movies.
$11,350,000
Opening weekend for the Martin Scorsese directed 'Hugo', his first foray into family films.
$12,700,000
Opening weekend for 'Arthur Christmas', the lowest opening ever for an Aardman animation film (creators of 'Wallace and Gromit').
$7,200,000
Second weekend take for 'The Descendants' after a 505% jump and the largest per screen average in the top 20 ($16,628).
$52,500
Per screen average for 'The Artist', a silent black and white film, marking the highest per screen average of the weekend.
"Water for Elephants" is a classic doomed love story set in The Great Depression: boy joins circus, boy meets girl, girl has obsessive overbearing husband, they get an elephant, and that never ends well. But that's just the Cliffs' Notes version.
Jacob Jankowski (Pattinson) is a one-day-shy-of-graduation veterinarian who finds his world turned upside down after a tragic accident. With nothing left to lose, Jacob takes a risk, hops a train, and finds himself on a journey that changes his life forever.
The next morning he finds himself shoveling manure for the struggling Benzini Brothers circus, rival to the Ringling Brothers outfit. While stowaways normally find themselves "red lighted" off the train (i.e., thrown off the moving train), Jacob manages to convince the circus boss, August (Waltz), that he is most useful to the circus as a vet. Enter Marlena (Witherspoon), star attraction and August's wife, and Jacob no longer has any rational control of his life.
August loves his circus and loves his wife. And by "love," I mean, obsesses, treats like possessions, and stops at nothing to make his business successful. He manages to procure an elephant who not only steals the movie, but is the lynch pin of the entire human dynamic.
This is a hard movie to watch in parts, especially if you love animals as much as I do. Thankfully, we know that the badness is purely special effect, but the real effect comes in hating August. Christoph Waltz plays just as big a bastard in "Water for Elephants" as he did in "Inglorious Basterds," but with less finesse. August is mean, very mean, and will stop at nothing to keep what "belongs" to him.
Jacob Jankowski is played by both Robert Pattinson (young version) and Hal Holbrook (older version); the latter of which is more convincing and more likeable. Reese Witherspoon is a joy to watch as the conflicted wife. She knows that she herself is a possession, but has so much compassion and love for the animals that she couldn't possibly leave August no matter how horrible he is. But it's Holbrook's final monologue that injects Jacob's true emotion into this film and brings believability to the entire affair.
This copy of "Water for Elephants" contains a Blue-Ray and digital copy of the movie that you can download onto portable devices.