A publication of Brunico Communications Ltd

Archive: Apr 17, 2006
News
Rocket set to launch in ...
Podeswa and Lantos going ...
CBC faces uncertain NHL ...
Hot Docs expands industry ...
Forget heads up TV at ...
Caster profits up 4% in ...
DiCocco replaces Meilleur
Street kids storm the box
History of Violence DVD ...
Hot Sheet
Global still bullish on ...
Top 20 TV Programs
Kamataki wins ratings ...
Sold!
Odeon opens $45-million ...
Banff names nominees
Survenant wins at CSC ...
Fuchs signs on at CBC
People
ReGenesis beefs up online ...
Briefs
Rocket's release noble ...
Motel too crowded
Playback readership poll ...
Correction
Drama series most ...
Film and TV Production
Weirdsville shoot settles ...
Markey finds The Good ...
An un-Pleasant feature
Young love on wheels
Briefly
Stone faced
NAB2006 Preview
New media explosion ...
4K for real at NAB2006
Five must-attend sessions
Software manufacturer SDS ...
Post manufacturers vie ...
Exhibition & D-cinema
Will better films mean ...
ShowCanada looks to boost ...
Kitchener's Christie ...
Cineplex expands
ShowWest founders to be ...

Advertising

Featured Careers
Street kids storm the box
by: Apr 17, 2006 Print

Quebec pop star and filmmaker Dan Bigras (Le Ring interieur) opened at the top box-office spot among Canadian films with his gritty take on Montreal street life, La Rage de l'ange - pushing aside Beowulf & Grendel in the week of March 31 to April 6 with a take of $171,730 across Quebec, for a per-screen average of $6,605.

The April 7 weekend brought in $75,000, pushing its total to an impressive $245,000-plus. La Rage - about the lives of street kids - got a solid push from Alliance Atlantis Vivafilm with an extensive ad campaign.

"I think people are going to see this because of the social issue attached - it's a powerful film," says AAV's Gabbie Corrente, adding that Bigras, the film's writer, director and star, has a huge following because of his music. "He's loved for his work in the music industry, and so those followers are built in to the appeal."

The film will launch in English Canada in May, with a Vancouver premiere.

The March 31 week saw the resilient

second-place Beowulf & Grendel net an additional $34,672 on 20 screens for a total take of $411,000 after four weeks.

The Canada/Japan copro Kamataki held at third, with two screens in Quebec bringing in $9,385. The film, a crowd pleaser and award winner on the festival circuit, opens in Toronto on April 21, and has already earned more than $100,000 at the Quebec box office.

Meanwhile, the true-life period drama Looking for Angelina, about a woman sentenced to hang for killing her abusive husband, opened on March 24 and took in an impressive $7,500 on one screen, breaking in at number five among Canuck films in its first week. It has since expanded to two screens in Toronto.

The comedy-drama Whole New Thing, starring Toronto theater favorite Daniel MacIvor, was to open on April 14. The sci-fi thriller The Limb Salesman will be released by ThinkFilm on April 21, while Alliance Atlantis is hoping for big things with its high-profile English Canada release of the Quebec hockey biopic hit The Rocket, also launching on April 21.

Actioner Silent Hill and Thom Fitzgerald's AIDS triptych Three Needles will open on April 21, through Odeon Films and Seville Pictures, respectively.


Advertising

© 1986-2008 Brunico Communications Ltd.

® Playback is a registered trademark of Brunico Communications Ltd. Use of this website is subject to Terms of Use. View our Privacy Policy.

Close
Match:
By DATE:  TO  
In these publications: