Ladder 49 starts with a fire in a large Baltimore factory where multiple firemen have charged to look for survivors and extinguish the posing threat. Now, in 2004, red-hot Joaquin Pheonix and John Travolta have teamed up to bring us the highly effective Ladder 49. In 2002, Anthony LaPaglia and Sigourney Weaver played a firefighter and a writer to prepare eulogies for those fallen in the attacks in The Guys. It is not surprising therefore that our newly energized interest was translated into big screen emotional powerhouses. On CNN we began to hear stories of the personal lives of these men.
Immediately after the tragic events, it was not uncommon to see people wave or salute firefighters in the most remote regions of our country. Although the loss of lives that day included thousands of innocents, we warmed to our heroes and it brought their efforts and incredible bravado back to our attention. On September 11, we watched in awe as the buildings collapsed and 340 firefighters were taken from us prematurely. It is a courage that most of us would like to think we have, but few of us are ever put into a position to test. They put their lives on the line to save others. They run into burning buildings while everyone else is running out. Firefighters have always been held in high regard. To say that our impression of firefighters changed that day sounds, well, awkward.
This was before Kurt Russell figured that Captain Ron might a good idea, and most importantly, this was before September 11, 2001. This was before Howard went on to direct such popular fare as Apollo 13 and A Beautiful Mind. "Resident Evil: Apocalypse," $2.3 million.It was thirteen years ago that Ron Howard's ode to firefighters hit theaters with 1991's Backdraft."Woman, Thou Art Loosed," $2.5 million."Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow," $3.4 million.These estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at North American theaters are from Exhibitor Relations Co. While "Shark Tale" did not approach the $70.3 million debut of last year's "Finding Nemo," it was distributor DreamWorks' second-best opening ever, behind the $108 million premiere of "Shrek 2."
"Shark Tale" overcame so-so reviews, with some critics calling it a retread of the "Shrek" movies and the fish tale "Finding Nemo."īut after a long drought for children's movies, families flooded theaters for "Shark Tale." Adding to the luster was the movie's A-list voice cast, including Smith, De Niro, Zellweger, Angelina Jolie, Martin Scorsese and Jack Black. If the numbers hold when final figures are released Monday, "Shark Tale" would set a record among October debuts, topping the $48.1 million opening of last year's "Scary Movie 3." "So 'Shark Tale' and, to a lesser extent, 'Ladder 49' really jump-started the marketplace." September was absolutely abysmal," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. "The box-office has been flatlining for the last month.