PostHeaderIcon 'Disturbia' Tops Idle Weekend

A weak crop of movies led to a poorly-attended weekend at the box office, even by late April standards. With new movies like Next and The Invisible following last weekend's meager batch (Fracture, Vacancy), it's as if the industry has been biding time until the summer season.

Overall business tallied $77.7 million, the lowest since September and down 24 percent from the same frame last year. It was the least attended end of April weekend in a decade. 2007 as a whole, though, still leads 2006 at the same point by three percent.

The sole bright spot, Disturbia, logged $9 million, the only movie to top the box office for three weekends in a row this year. Down 31 percent, the hit thriller has captured $52.1 million in 17 days.

The Invisible, a supernatural horror mystery from Buena Vista, dug up a paltry $7.7 million at 2,019 sites, significantly less than the studio's comparably-released teen pictures Stay Alive and Stick It last year.

The higher profile Next fared worse, generating $7.1 million at 2,735 locations. Opening to a third of the business of the similarly-themed Deja Vu (which was released on DVD this week), the $70 million action thriller starring Nicolas Cage as a man who can see a few minutes into the future presented a muddled, tired premise and had a marketing campaign that favored cheesy spectacle and the actors' names over clarity or suspense. Brandon Gray